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                  <text>~ ..;. The

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Feb. 21, 1972

&lt;lay Cook, •88 Died on Monday ·.
Clay Cook, 88, Pine Grove,
,died Monday morning at
Veterans Memor'c l Hospital.
Mr. Cook was preceded in
deal~ by his parents, Lum and
Melissa Sargent Cook ; his
wife , Erma ; a daughter,
Garnet, a brother, and a sister.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Leonard Hess, Jr .,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. George
Waller, Lancaster ; a granddaughter. Mrs. George (Ann )
Van Horn, a nd a grea tgranddaughter, Angela Lynn
Van Horn.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home where

INFANT HELPED
The 'Pomeroy E-R unit answered a call at 6 p. m.
Saturday to the Worley Haley
residence on the Happy Hollow
Road for Eric Walker, threemonths-old, who was having
convulsions. The infant was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital before being trans.
ferred to Holzer Medical
Center.
The girls' basketball squad
at Meigs High School made its
season record 6-2 Saturday by
dumping Wahama 32 to 12.
For the winners, Lee Sebo
and Deb Ohlinger each had 6,
Sharon Cogar&gt;, Sherry King 4,
Pat Harris 3, Mary Weyersmiller, Joy White, Jane
Thomas and Chris Miller, 2
each. For Wahama, Lieving
had 6, M. Jones and Paugh, 2
each.
Meigs will play at Kyger
Creek this evening at 6.
... : .·:· .... .

friends may call any time.
Burial will be in the Pine Grove
Cemetery.
'

Two Honored

By Freedoms
Foundation
Two area residents were
among 93 Ohioans and O~io
organizations cited today by
the Freedoms Foundation at
Valley Forge, Pa. Each winner
was presented a special
citizenship award.
A-IC Pamela A. Moore,
United States Air Force,
daugh.ter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Moore, Rt. I, Cheshire,
a 1970 graduate of Kyger Creek
High School, was the Gallia
County honoree.
Miss Moore entered the Air
Corps in 1970. She is stationed
at Lackland AFB, Texas.
Sgt. Forrest D. Bachtel of
Middleport, also a member of
the United States Air Force,
was the other local award
winner . Sgt. Bachtel is
stationed at Luke Air Force
Base in Phoenix, Ariz.

Kenneth Young

Died Saturday

Kenneth R. Young, 68,
Tuppers Plains, died Saturday
afternoon at the Riverside
Methodist · Hospital
in
Columbus following a two year
illness.
Mr. Young was a member of
Carpenters
Local
200,
Columbus, and the Fraternal
Order of Eagles in Columbus.
He was a veteran of World War
CONFINED TO JAIL
1!, serving as a carpenter's
Paul Kuhn, 24, Pomeroy, has mate in the South Pacific three
been arrested by the Pomeroy years.
Police Dept. on a charge of
Surviving are his wife, Lucy
statutory rape upon a minor. Summerfield Young; a sister,
Police said that Kuhn is con- Mrs. Gordon (Helen) Caldwell,
fined to the county jail Tuppers Plains; two l!rothers,
following his arrest Sunday, Clifford of Columbus, and Olen,
Bond, set at $&gt;,000, has not of Reedsville; a niece, and
been furnished.
five nephews. Preceding him in
death were his parents,
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
Clarence M. and Nettie
The Middleport E-R squad Chevalier Young.
answered a call at I: 10 a. m.
Funeral services will be held
Monday for Ill-month-old Mike at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the White
Harris at 169 Second Ave. The Funeral Home in Coolville with
infant, having difficulty fn Evan~~!ist Joseph B. Hoskins
Hospital before being trans- officiating. Burial will be In the
ferred to Holzer Medical Success Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Center.
any time.

... . .

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
February 21 -22
I NEVER SANG
FOR MY FATHER

( Technicolor)

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
was 38 degrees under cloudy
skies.

Pat Makes Like a .Tourist

Gene Hackman

" GP"

Plus
SUMMER TREE
(Technico lor )

Jack Warden
Michael Douglas

" GP"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mary Ford, Melody Roberts,
Douglas
Johnson,
Rex
Argabrite, Steven Scharliger.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Will
Turnbull,
Everett
Thomas, Mildred Turner.

"I can't he six
places at ·once!"

Saturday at 83

PEKING (UPJ)- Pat Nixon sipped jasmine
tea and turned a shopper's eye on SO!Jle of tbe
local tourist goods in her first few hours in
Olina today, but had almost no contact with the
people in the street.
Dressed in a flaming red coal _, shade
called " American Beauty" - and ,wearing
black gloves but no hat in the crisp winter
sunshine, Mrs. Nixon was whisked from
Shanghai to Peking and then across the city
with her hus!Jand after the brief welcome
ceremony at the airport outside the ancient
imperial city .
.
HerJirst real chance to mingle with Chinese
below the official level probably would come at
a banquet in the Great Hall of the People in the
center of Peking later today .
'
During a brief layover at the airport out&amp;ide
Shanghai, Mrs. ·Nixon stepped inside the ter·
minal where she was served a cup of jasmine
lea with a pale yeilow jasmine bloom floating in
il.

An&lt;) inside the Sllanghal teryninal, wJth its
·larger-than·litt portraits of Mao Tse-tung and
James W. Whittington , ,83,
By Helen Bottel
Lenin, the First Lady found a showcase filled Depot St., · Rutland, · dted
with Chinese artifacts and gifts .
· Saturday evening at Veterans
"look at all the things to buy " she said like • Memortal Hospital. . ·M~ ·
' . Wh'~lUng
· to n re t'tr ed from hts
TWO MORE REALLY A CROWD
· hunter. '
any other souvenir
•
nur·mg U.e greeling at peki ng .Ai,rport .she with
dulles 111 bndge construction Dear Helen:
.
.
h ,
the New York Central
.
My
wife's
mother
and
father
are
dlvo~.
I
now
see
w
Y.
followed her hu8band down the protocol line, Ra'ir d ·
·
1963
Wben
her
dad
became.
ill,
we
took
h~
Ul. He recuperated
shaking hands with Premiel' Olou En-lai and
; oa lmg a~e his . wUe ·
oot, heing 70, be stayed on with ua, and !lungs, ran !lllloo~y as
the oth~r officials, some in Ma&lt;Htyle jackets, Ma~~~:v ·~wo sons, Leo,
he stayed to himself and wasn't demanillng. We have a big, old
others m We~lern topco~ts.
Rutland , and Carroll, of
.
She then jomed her offtctal hostess, Madame Buffalo w. Va. · two sisters, house with plenty of bedrooms.
.
Titen,
along
carne
Mama.
She
told
us
she
couldn't
Jive
alone
Li Hsien-flien, wife of the. vice premier of Mrs ·'Rose Ann Martin ,
Olina, for a quick ride across Peking to a guest · Syr~cuse, and Mrs. Bess any more though she seems bealthy. I believe she ~ot her n~se
house near a frozen lake on the other side of tbe Harris, Columbus; nfne out of joint because Dad see~ed the favorite. So she moved Ill,
capital.
grandchildren and 11 great.
too! we put them at opposite sid.es of the house, but It
still
Mrs. Nixon's day-by-day sclledule has not grandchildren.
been revealed by Chinese officials, but she was
Funeral services will he held war from the start. Mother picks, nags, bosses, and crtllclzes.
known to be planning a visit to a children's at 2 p.m. Tuesd~y at the Cross Dadyeils "Shut up Woman!" and goes down to the corner bar 'to
buddies. Once home, he's imbibed enough
hospiial, a school, a commune and a glass Creek United Methodist get drunk with
factory .
Church at Buffalo. The Rev. hottled courage to give· her what.for. Which he does - all
.
Lloyd Grimm will officiate and even~.
When·
he
isn't
there
she
starts
on
our
children
and my wife,.
burial will be in the · Cross
Creek Cemetery. Frienda may teD~ them what's wr~ng with whatever they're ~ing. We've
call at the Marlin Funeral got an armed camp he&lt;"e, and if someth~ doesn~ g~ve soon, I'D
Scheduled Peking Tube Coverage
.
.
Home in Rutland anytime on move out!
1Continued from page I)
NEW YORK (UPI) -ne television networks have
My wife feels she "owes" her parents a hon;t,e, and. she lS a
Monday, until 11 a. m.
announced the followlug times for scheduled coverage of
conversations with China's Tuesday, and at the church in nonflghter, so she thinks we should just 'take It, lgnormg what ·
leaders durin~ his first day on Buffalo from I p. m. until lime we can. She doesn't feel we should put either of these two out. I .
President Nixon In Peking (ail times subject to change
Chinese soil.
as events warrant):
of services.
say they could easily take care of themselves in a senior citizens'
- With Chou, 73, described in
ABC -Monday, 20 to 30 minutes of tbe Dick Cavett
village. Titey aren't broke!
a jovial mood, for 20 minutes
Show; which is on from 11:30 p.m. to 1 a.m. Tuesday
What do you say? - MAN AT ARMS
abdut
"generalities"
alter
7:3&amp;-8 a.m.
Dear Man:
their arrival at the Nixon guest
CBS -Monday 11:30 p.m.to midnight. Tuesday not
·
1 say go shopping for the best senior citizens' village
Pleasant Vallev Hosollal
house. Kissinger and Secretary
avaUable.
tomorrow!
Correction: find TWO such apartment complexes Names of patients · admitted
of
State
William
P.
Rogers
NBC- Monday 11:30 p.m. to midnight. Tuesday,
·
have been temporarily at opposite sides of town.
participated.
part of the Today Show, which is on from 7·9 a.m.; 11:30
When parents are financially and physically able )'&gt; live • ·
-With Mao, 78, at his home, discontinued for publication.
p.m. to midnight.
alone,
only a totaily browbeaten daughter would insist that she
Discharges: Mrs. Bernard
for. an hour.
Wallace, Pomeroy; Barbara "owes" them a home.lt's time she threw off the yoke and started ·
~~ilif:~ffi~~~~;rum~;~~~~*=~~~~~~lml~l~l~~~m~]mm.~~~~;~~~;l~ll~~;~~~~~m~mm;~~;~*~~f:l~$~1l*~l1ili1~ml*~~; th;
:t~ 0~~~
~a~ Wheeler, Thomas McNeeley, thinking of her husband and children! - H.
FLOOR LEASED
+++
massive building in downtown Point Pleasant ; Donald
Dear
Helen:
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Vantrunene,
Wheeling,
Mich.;
Peking which was to serve
first floor of McGraw-Hill's
People against ~ailed trial marriages, say tbey're im·
later in the day as the site of a · Mrs. William Blaine, Jr.,
new headquarters building
Mrs.
Phillip
Werry,
daughter;
moral
and dangerous, especiaily for the woman. Those in favor
huge banquet honoring Nixon
under construction on 6th
ai1d the officials accompanying Pomeroy; Walter Donohue, say they're the only way to discover.whether it will be "real" and
Avenue in Manhattan has ~een
Renege Kiser, Point Pleasant; last~.
him.
leased - to the Irving Trust
Has a survey ever been made to determine how many
The 90-minute delay in the Warren Stewart, Leon; Paul
Co.
meeting at the Great Hall Poar, Henderson; Mrs. Paul nonmarrlages end with weddings and how many of these couples
. raised questions which, of Glover, Milton; Ernest go their separate ways?
course, disappeared with. Zle· Rickard, Leon Putz, Point
And do nonmarried people feel less like failures when the
Yeag~r
REEDSVILLE - U.S. Air gler's announcement about the Pleasant; Thomas William, trial fizzles? - WONDERING
Force Master Sergeant John unexpected meeting with Mao. New Haven; Barbara Herd· Dear Won.: ·
man, Letart.
M. Crary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Guest List Unknown ·
Have heard of no surveys, oot II one in every three or four
Births: Feb. 20, a son to Mr.
Reed B. Crary of Reedsville,
'J'he guest list at the banquet
Mrs. Anna Foss Yeager, 84, participated in a recent U. S. was not known . The hall seats and Mrs. Roger Legue, MI. marriages ends in divorce, it's JRttY safe to assume that llveCole St., Middleport, died Readiness Command joint &gt;,000, but not that many were Alto, and Feb. 20, a son to Mr. togethers make It legal much less often. It's easier and cheaper
Monday morning at Veterans service training,exercise at Ft. expeded.
and Mrs. Robert Brown, Point to walk away when you have only verbal ties- on a trial basis:
(But I'll bet the feeling of failure is still very much there.)
Memorial Hospital.
Stewart, Ga . The exercise Among the invited guests Pleasant.
Getting back to surveys, I've often wondered how many
Mrs. Yeager was born Dec. involving more than 7,000 Air were those who accompanied
married
people might check the "yes" box on this question:
25, '!887 in Pomeroy , the Force, Army, ' Air National Nixon to China- newsmen,
Honest now, would you have married your spouse, had you
daughter of the late Charles Guard and Air Force Reserve communications technicians,
SLIDES
OF
ROAD
lived with him or her two years before the wedding?
and Frances Campbell Foss. personnel - tested the transportation specialists and
The
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
Ask it of yourselves, readers, but don't insist on a truthful
She was also preceded in death mobility and flexibility of the the baggage handlers.
Dept.
reporting
a
minor
ac·
answer from your mate! - H. ·
'
by her husband, William E. newly crea(ed REDCOM which
The delay in the start of the
cident
Saturday
at
11:58
p.m.
Yeager; two lrothers, and a replaced the U.S. Strike talks was announced to Ameri·
+++
on
SR
681,
said
Anne
Regina
Dear
Helen
:
.
sister. Surviving are several Command Jan . 1.
·
can journalists In late af·
nieces and nephews.
Action at Ft. Stewart in- lernoon as they awaited Gellert, 19, Edmonds, Wash., "' DtJring 0111' ~~ ~~ of.P.UII:fll\~~· ,lp1, I!Jielli!nd hlld SOV~F~~~
Funeral services will be held eluded paradrop operations, Nixon's arrival. A Olinese traveling south, skidded off the affairs. Finally be left me for a girl of-21 who iiail money fi\OU8b
at 2 p.m . Wednesday at the assault landings, close air spokesman. came out, said the road on the left Into a ditch in a to support his drinking and gambling. She even paid his way out
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home support and an Army assault talks would be delayed an hour 90-degree turn. There were no of jail a couple of times.
with the Rev. Charles Simons on a mythical aggressor force and invited the newsmen in for injuries, and no citation was
Now, two years later, he shows up, says he's changed and
issued.
officiating. Burial will be in in control of a simulated allied a cup of tea.
begs me to take him back. But he says he can~ dump the girl "all
Riverview Cemetery.
forward operating base .
,
at once," because he owes her so much. He Clllltlnuesllvlng With
Mrs. Yeager was a member
her, but sees me and hia children sew~ times. a week. Wben
cr.ary is an ai~craft
of the Pomeroy First Baptist Sergeant
support equtpmenl repatrman
f U
he's over lll!re too much, she caDs and demands that he come
Church. ' Friends may call at with the Tactical Air Com"home." And he goes! He says "Have patience." Should I?the funeral home after 10 a.m. mand 's 33rd Tactical Fighter
C.F.
Tuesday.
Wing at Eglin AFB, Fla.
Pear C.:
.
The sergean I, who has
· No! Teil him to do you a favor and stay with the girl who
,served in Southeast Asia, is a
bought him. Takers only "change" when they see another chance
19ii7 graduate of Chester High
NEW HAVEN
An Christ to the area will be to take. -H.
School. His wife is the former
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
enriching, rewarding and chaired by the following:
HOGS - 2()1).230, 26 ; No. I, Gloria F. Miller.
unforgettable experience is in Prayer, Rev. Bernice Winkler;
IN HOLZER
CLASS TO MEET
26.25 ; 23().240, 25.75; 24().250,
store for the people of Meigs Ushering and Finance, Harold
Charles Larkins is a patient
The Loyal Women's Cass of
25.25, 26().280, 24.50; 19().200,
and Mason Counties when the Bumgarnder; Telephone and the Middleport Church of in the Holzer Medical Center.
25.50; 18().!90, 24.60:· Sows Billy Graham Evangelistic Transportation, Rev. Frank Christ will meet at 7:30 p. m. Cards may be sent to him at
300-425, 22.5().23; 43o.:5&gt;0, 24.60SUPPER PLANNED
movies come to this area. Cheesebrew; Rev. Gerald Thursday at the home of Mrs. room 37~.
soup
supper
will
be
held
Movies
as a medium wi~ Sayre and Stella Randolph;
A
25.10. Boars- 19 · 21.60 ;
OsCar Roush.
4
30
Stock Hugs - 22-24.10. Pigs by Wednesday beginning a1 ' p. become alive when five leading Promotion and Publicity, Rev.
m. at the annex of the Racine . films are shown at the New Robert Card and Mrs. Ray
Head - 12.50 to 17.
CA TILE- 482 Head. Choice Wesleyan United Methodist Haven Theatre Sunday, March Fox; Church Sc~ool, Ruth
Steers, 34.90-36.50; Good, 32.3&amp;- Church . The menu will include 19, through March 23, at 7 p.m. Pickens and Wendall Hoover;
When the five great dramatic Evangelism chairman, and
33.60; Choice Heifers, 32..'i(). soup, pie, sandwiches and
33.90; Good Cows, 24.ii0·25.8&gt; ; coffee.
films, "The Restless Ones," Follow Up, Rev. Oris Smith
Utility, 22·23.40; Canners and
"The Hearl Is a Rebel ," and Rev'., Parker Hinzman;
Cutters, 111-19.75; Bulls, 27.1().
" Lucia," "Shadow of The Personal Workers, Rev.
WILL MEET ALLDAY
28.7&gt; ; Heavy Feeders Steers,
SYRACU§E - The Ladies Boomerang," and "His Land" Robert Bumgarner, Rev.
28 .25-32.40 ; Heavy Calves Auxiliary of the Syracuse Fire are shown, a univ.ersal appeal Achsah Miller; Location and
Steers, 35.50·43.&gt;0 ; Heavy Dept. will hold an all day will aid in clearly presenting Facilities, Rev . William
Calves Heifers, 26.&gt;().3&gt;; Cows meeting Tuesday beginning at the claims of Christ to the DeMoss; Nursery, Barbara
and Calves by Head, 237-325. 9:30a. m. at the hea~quarters. en\ire Bend Area and Zerkle ; Concession, LaVera
VEAL CALVES - Choice The group will work on eggs surrounding communities.
Yeager and Louise Radford ;
52.75-» .75; Good 46 .2&gt; ; and Easter basi&lt;• ts in the
Committee chairmen and Evangelism, Rev . Parker
Medium 40. Baby Calves By morning with a business members, in preparation for Hinzman, Rev. Oris Smith and
Head , ~meeting at I p. m. following this great event mel at Rev. Jake Lehman.
LAMBS - 26.2:i-31.
Pomeroy United Methodist
Progress , Evaluation and
potluck dinner at noon.
'
Church Thursday evening. Facilities Committees will
You'll
recognize
Rev . Oris Smith, Long Bottom, ·; meet at New Haven United
this well known
Ohio is general chairman and MethodistChurch, Feb. 24, 7:30
quality brand by
Rev. Parker Hinzman, Mason, p.m.
the "W" on the
W. Va ., is the minister co"But grow in grace, and in
pocket.
ordinator.
the knowledge of our Lord and
An intensive campaign to Savior, Jesus Christ." 2 Peter
Blue denim • .
clearly present the claims of 3:'16.
'
black.
brown,
green , white, light
blue. · navy• wheat .

Us.

••

M-Sgt. Crary

POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drlve·ln Window Is
open t a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
$21,1101 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depoallor

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

:::t

:::;e

AF Exercises

Anna

Dies Monday

GIV'/1ham Movtes Will
Come to New Haven

Elberfelds In .Pomeroy
Special .Purchase

INGELS FOR THE BEST

CARPET BUYS
Largest Supplr In Stock
In The Big Bend Area

Shop Ingels before
you buy. Buy today,
installed
tomorrow
by Ingels' expert
craftsmen

501 NYLON
.

I

$48stRE
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Ingels Furniture
H2-2635

• MIDDLEPORT

Garden Club Met

''Little Things that Mean a
Lot" was the program topic
used by Mrs. Hubal Caldwell at
the Wednesday night meeting
of the Rose Garden Club of
Tuppers Plains held at the
home of Mrs. Ina Massar.
Mrs. Caldwell emphasized
the value of following planting
directions, proper selection of
plant materials and suitable
planting sites in relation to
amount of required sunlight.
Special arrangement at the
meeting was a crescent design
uf red carnations using a
valentine angel figurine by
Mrs. Charles Massar. Mrs.
Helen Dorst gave the ~&lt;erse of
the month and · timely gardening lips were presented by
Mrs. Niese! Weatherman .
" ~'aith's Gardt:n " wa. tlie

· devotional reading by Mrs.
Clarence Headley. Members
gave the Lordls p~ayer in
unison. Household hints were
given by the members iri
response 1\) roll call. Several
arrangements at the meeting
carried out the valentine
theme.
Mrs . Rose Carr, vice
prrsident, conducted the
meeting in the absence of the
president,
and
Mrs.
Weatherman was the actil]S
secretary. Mrs. Wea1herm8it
will oo .the. hostess for tHe
March meeting. Th~ traveling
prize donated by Mrs. Vercia
Stout was won by Mrs. Ina
)lh.ssar . Mrs . Weathe_rman
won lhe door prize. Refresh·
ments were served by the
. hostess .

I • ,

\

SIZES 5/6 TO 20
REG. 15.00

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'(

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

Hosed, Swept Weekly
· Plans to clean .up Pomeroy were made Monday night by
village council.
Mayor W'll!iam Baronick, presiding at the regular meeting in
town hall, said he intends to meet With the street committee to
complete plans to sweep and clean village streets !!II soon as
weather permits.
The mayor said the streets would he hosed down as well as
swept each week.
Councilman Jim Mees reported that employes of the GalliaMelgs Community Action Program will be available to the
village to clean from under the bridge bypass, up West Main, to
the old C&amp;O depot.

E.AS'n!:R- SEAL TELETHON operators who. wlll .be on duty at the Pomeroy Motor ·Com·
pany Wring the 20-hour Telethon March Z-28 are (ront-row; left to right, Renee Burke and Jill
Warner, Southern High School students; Cathy Yates, Meigs High; back row, Coool~ Warner
and Delra West of Southern High School. others not pictured who will be assisting in the
teletbonareSualeSoulsby, Carla Kuhn, Dealt Lutz, Danny Thompson, Mrs. Lucien·Poulin, Eva
Frances, and Bob Sylvester. The theme of this year's national Easter Seal telethon iS "If you
don't h:ave a crippled child, will you help one of.ours." 'lbia ls.the first riatlonal Easter Seal
Teleth.on with Metga County being among the fir~ to participate, The operators Will handle aU
callsandperfonn clerical work during ~e 20 hours telethon,

.
.
G
.
C
. tJJ•Iosity · rowmg
Peki:Rg Crowds
Wann Up Well

To Americans

•

ews•• zn
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
MOSCOW- THE SOVIET UNION TODAY said Luna 20
safely soft~anded on a rugged lunar mountainside within yards
of where another unmanned Sovl~t moon pr,obe vanished five
months ago. The Tass news agency said the unmanned Luna 20
touched down a.t 10:19R.m. (2:19p.m. EST) Monday on the ex.treme ealllem shli: of the moon lis 'Viewed from eartiY.
Coordinates given by Tass put the landing site in the lofty
Apollonius Mountains and within a quarter-mlle of where Luna 18
vanished during a soft-landing attempt Sept. 11. Tass made no
mention of a moonmoblle or moonscoopeJ: aboard Luna 20,
launclted eight days ago. Western space experts speculated it
might carry a new.version of the Lunokhod 1 robot which lor 10
months explored the lunar sea of rains.

PEKING (UPI)-ln high
Spirits, President Nixon and
Premier Olou En-lal conferred
b.;_, lielrty , _ boura- lllday
While Pelilng'a people lined up
to bay newsP&amp;pers and ·clustered around wall posters
carrying accounts · of their
American guest's activities In
Olina.
The crowds in downtown
department stores, almost as if
by signal, warmed noticeably
to the 300 Americans . who
SAIGON -AU. S. AIR FORCE F4 Phantom jet shot down a
accernpanled Nixon to Peking. Soviet-built MIG21 in a dogfight over Laos Monday and other U.
The atmosphere was much S. jets st!'lJCk five times Into North Vietnam Monday and today,
more friendly, and Chou, 73,
(Cmtlnued on page 10)
the
old
Communist
revolutionary, appeared
relaxed.and less severe in the
company of his capitalist
guest,
Wall posterS carrying ac• .
cOunts of the Nixon meetinge
with Olou and Mao T~g.
78, · . ~.· father ·figure of all
O!ina, drew crowds along the
streets on the second day of
Nllron's eight-day mission to
Otlna. The day was chilly but
·bright until the afternoon
smoke caused by industrial
smoke settled in once again.
After a working session that,
lasted three hours and 50
minutes, White House Press
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler
declined to tell report~rs
IK!ythlng about the substance
of the talk. But his !road smile
left the impression that he felt
TWO MEMBERS OF this clarinet quartet from the
things were going swinuningly.
Meigs High School will be making thelr"fourth consecutive
The President and his wife
appearance at solo and ensemble festivals of the Ohio Music
Pat had time for just a brief
Education AIIOctatlori In Athl!lll Saturday. They are Jo Ellen
diru!er in their guest house in
'
west Peking before retW'lling
to Downtown Peking for a night
at theoperaanda performance
of the revolutionary ballet,
"The Red Detachment of
Women," a Communist
village's struggle .against the
Japanese during the war of the
19308.
Olou Ill at Nixon's side at
the opEl'&amp; boose with an in·
terpreter sitting between the
Nllrollll to explain the action on
The. people of Peking were

Shop weekdays 9: 30 to 5. Open both Friday
and· Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.

TUESOAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1972

Chance of snow flurries
norijleaat, partial clearing
west and IC!Uth. Clearing and
colder tonight. Low 5 to 15
north and 10 to 10 lOUth. In·
creasillfl cloudlneu and not
quite as cold Wednesday. High
in the 308.

Pomeroy Mayor, Council
ExpectSueemw be

the stage.

WHILE THEY LAST

enttne

Weather

Clean Up Plans ·Pushed

his'

In Readiness

Yo u can be paying the butcher, the baker.
the land lord, and all the others, all at
the same time ... by paying with CHECKS.
. We'd like to sta rt an account for you.

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.

NO. 220

~~

CBE

Oh Yes You Can!

VOL XXIV

•

Devoted To The lnteresll Uf The Meip-MQIOn Area

oi

Women's Jeans

-··

·1;$00' mile-long delenslv.e
fortlllcatioll buDt woUQCI the
4th century B.C. to .keep out
.Huna, Ia considered the
!ll'tltest lidldlng enterprise
.ever undertaken ~Y man. ·

Mao Joins

Market Report

Melvin Douglas

.., \lltlled Preu ..........
111e Great wan ot 011na, •

Helen .Help

.Of Rutland Dies

•

Now You Know

Mr. Whittington

lined up for two blocks at
newsstands waiting to get
copies of the six-page
"Peoples' Daily," which
devoted seftll photographs and
text covering 2~ pages w
Nllron and his meeting with the
top level of Otina's Communist
oHiclalcklm. The paper went on
sale during the second formal
meeting ~ between Chou
and Nixon.
Cboll'a Toist PrtDied
Tite paper printed the text of
Olou's toast at Monday's big
banquet, perhap1 the friend·
!lest speech he ever has
'delivered about America.
Olou's pn11111 aide said he
• (COntinued on page !0)

Mees showed to council a list
of the streets in the village that
do not have street signs. He
also noted that several areas in
town are becoJlling garbage
dumps.
Council agreed, and directed
Pomeroy Chief of Police Jed
Webster to see that the dump
areas are cleaned up. It was
also noted by council that the
signs at the intersection of Nye
Ave. and East Main St. be
takim down and cleaned.
Mees, reporting on the recent
meeting with Meigs COunty
School Board, said the board
advised council that the old
Pomeroy Junior and Senior
HighSchool buildings, in.which
the village is interested in
using as a city building, would
not be available until at least
1973. Mees said it was pointed
out by the board that an in·
crease in student enrollinent is
expected within !lie next three
years of from 1,600 to 2,200
pupils.
Baronick reported that he
will attend a m~etlng Tuesday
·in Marietta on sewage, water,
and construction. of municipal
buildings.
It was announced that the
Meigs County Committee on
Alcoholism will meet Thursday at St. Paul's Lutheran
Church on drug abuse with
John Yates principal speaker.
Two bids for a police cruiser
were read and submitted for
further study. Submitting bids
were Pomeroy Motor Company

in the a moun I of $3,739 minus a
$1,000 trade-in, and R. H.
Rawlings Sons Company, in the
amount of $3,797.90 minus a
trade-in of $1,447.90.
.Council gave Webster permission to purchase no
smoking signs to be placed in
city hall.
Council voted to purchase 100
rebuilt parking meters for the
parking lot wall at a cost of
$12.95 each providing the firm
will
accept . quarterly
payments.
A letter was read from
Syracuse Mayor Herman
. thaI' Mayor
London askmg
Baronick, a committee from
Pomeroy Council, and the
(Continued on page 10) .

':(~:':f.::::::.:::::::::==~=:~=~~;.».=~==~:::::&gt;.-.~»~
TICKETS ON SALE
Admission tickets for both
adults and students for tbe
first round of play of the
Class
AA
Sectional
Baskelbail TournlUilenl at
Symmes Vailey High Sckool
are on sale at the office of
Meigs Hlgb School.
Principal James Diehl
said there Is a chance of a
sellout for the openlug round
on Feb. 25 when Meigs High
plays and therefore no
tickets will be sold at the
door. Tickets for the opening
night will he on sale at $1.25
each at tbe high school office
until Thursday evening.

Diehl and Irene Bamea, from left, who were with groupa who
received the highest grade (superior) aD three previous
years, and Rosemary Rice, and Lynne Baker.

,,

DEMOLAY SWEETHEART -Miss Sherry King, center, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
William King, Middleport Route I, was named District 11 DeMolay Sweetheart Sunday af.
ternoon in Chillicothe. With Miss. King are left, Erin A. Anderson, Chillicothe, Great Seal
Olapter Sweetheart, and right, Becky Mlngua, Athens Chapter Sweetheart. Miss King
;resented a baton routine in the talent segment of the competition. She Is head majorette of the
Meigs High School marching band. Miss Anderson ;resented a dance and Miss Mingus a plano
solo. Miss King, a·senlor at Meigs High School, will take part in state competition next summer. Jolm Purdum of Great Seal Olapter, president of the district association, and Don Dick,
chalnnan of contest arrangements, presided over Sunday's event. Several members of the
Meigs Chapter attended.

Teachers

pose
Action by Board
·

·

Action by the Meigs Local
School District's Board of
Education requesting the
resignation of head band
director, David Bowen, was
"unfair and unethical," ac ~
cording to a resolution
presented to the boacd in
recessed session Monday
night.
Approximately 40 parents
and teachers were at the
meeting held at the junior high
school in Middleport when Mrs.
Rita Slavin, president of the
teachers' association of the
district,
presented
the
resolution to the board on
behalf of the association .
According to rei&gt;orts, Bowen
was advised verbally last
Wednesday by Supt. George
Hargraves that the board of
education had requested his
resignation. The request is
helieved to have derived from
a board of education meeting
held last Monday.
Bowen was present for last

night's recessed session when
Mrs. Slavin presented the
resolution which had been
adopted by the executive
committee of the Meigs Local
Teachers Assn. at a special
meeting earlier yesterday.
The resolution reads :
"Be it resolved that the
Meigs
Local
Teachers
Association Is opposed to the
action of the Meigs Local
Board of Education in their
request for the resignation of
Mr . David Bowen. The
Association considers this
action unfair and unethical for
the following reasons: .
"!. Mr. Bowen was given just
two days . to submit his
resignation.
"2. The Board of Education
did not give Mr. Bowen any
reasons for the request, and did
not offer Mr. Bowen the chance
to answer any charges that
might have I?een made against
him.
"3. The request was made

Council on Aging
To be Organized
Sunday at Heath

Chou, Nixon Swap

A Meigs County Council on
Aging is expected to be
organized at a meeting to be
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at
Middleport 's Heath United
Methodist Church.
Senior citizens, civic leaders,
businessmen and other interested residents are invited
to attend Sunday's session
which combines two separate
endeavors to form senior
citizens groups in Meigs
County. Federal 'funds to
provide programs for senior
citizens are available to
counties which have official
committees.
The Meigs County effort will ·
be teamed with that in Vinton,
Jackson, and Gallia Counties
and Sunday it is expected that
three delegates will be named
to the district council on aging,
THIS BRASS sextet from . to be made up of residents of
the Meigs High School In·
the ' four counties. The Rev . '
struntenlal music depart- . Robert R. Card and the Rev.
A record number of in- working afier school this week and Jenny Chapman, flute trio; ment will be one of II of the
Arthur Lund have been active
strumental music groups from rehearsing with their in- Sharon Bing, Carol Lewis, school's entries In the Ohio
in attempts to organize a
the Meigs High School will be structors David Bowen and Vicky Clelland, and Debbie · Music Education Association
council
on aging in Meigs
in Athens Saturday where they Lewis Shields preparing for ~iddy, clarinet quartet; Jo Solo and Ensemble Festival
will participate In the Ohio their Saturday appearances. Ellen Diehl, Rosemary Rice, In Athens Saturday, ~rom County.
Music Education Association
Making up the groups are : Lynne Baker and Irene Bar· the left are Connie Grueser,
JAYCEES TO MEET
Solo and Ensemble Festival at
Barbara Fultz, Babs Witte nes, clarinet quartet; Edith Connie Radford, Fred Jones,
The
Meigs County Jaycees
Ohio University .
and Joy Hayes, flute trio; Mees, Julia Hutct.ison, Terry Nathan Robinette, Melanie
wiii meet a t 8 tonight at
Participating students tire Becky Wright, Donna Francis, ' (Continued ~n page 10)
Burt 'and Melanie Harkett. · Pomeroy village hall .
'I

10 Combos In Competition

just a week before the participation of some sb.ldents in
the contest at Ohio University
and only three weeks before
the band participates In the
district band contest. This
could definitely have a
demoralizing effect on the
students involved in the tontest.
"4. Mr. Bowen's contract Is
not up until June, 1972, and new
contracts will not be offered
until the last of March, 1972.
There is a question as to the
ethics involved in asking for a
resignation this early.
"5. Mr. Bowen has not been
incompetent in his posi!ion. He
has performed his duties under
many
hardships
and
regulations over which he had
no control.
"6. Only in one instance
during the past football season
was Mr. Bowen given any
indication by the administration that the marching
!Continued on page 10)

Pandas, Musk Ox
PEKING (UP! ) - Premier
Chou En-lai is trading
President Nixon two giant
black and white pandas lor two
San Francisro musk oxen.
Pat Nixon disclosed · that
Chou offered the two pandas
during a banquet in the Nixon's
honor Monday night at
Peking's Great Hall of the
People.
"You've given us oxen. We'll
load up the plane with pandas,"· she quoted Chou as
saying.
Three U. S. zoos , in
Washington, D. C., Detroit and
St. Louis, already have bid for
the native Asian pandas.
At present there are only two
pandas In captivity outside
China - a female named "Chi·

Chi" in London and a male
called "An-An" in Moscow.
In 1966, Chi-Chi was sent to
Moscow for a three-month
rendezvous with An-An. The
most passionate moment between the two came when Chi·
Chi gave An·An a sound slap on
the jaw.
· Officials said both now are
too old to mate.
The President contacted the
San Francisco Zoo before his
trip to Peking to clear the musk
oxen for a swap. Musk oxen,
native of the North American
Arctic regions, are huge,
shaggy beasts with long curled
b.lsks - and an over-whelming
musky smeil.

I
TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Middleport E·R unit
answered a call for Mrs.
Martha Searles at her home on
Route 7 belol'( Hobson at 1:18 .
p.m. M~nday. Mrs. Searles,
suffering head pains , was
taken to the Holzer Medical
Center.

HURT BY TREE
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
called to LangsviUe at 2:11
p.m. Monday for Clayton Smith
who suffered a back injury
when struck by a limb from a
tree. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was reported in satisfactory
condition.

'

�- ..
'
,_ 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooleroy, 0,. Feb. 22, 1972

· "--' '111e DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972

Jenny MenchiniHonored
Jennifer (Jenny) Mencblni,
daughter of Mrs . Renzo
Menchini, Pomeroy, and the
late Dr. Menchlnl, bas been
named to Sigma Theta Tau,
national nursing honorary . .,
A senior at Ohio State
University where she will
graduate In -June with a BS
degree in nursing, Miss
Menchini is also a member of
the Torch Club, Ohio State
nursing honorary. At Ohio
State, Miss Menchini bas been
a member of the Karate Club
and was a "little sister" of ·
Delta Upsilon Fraternity.
She is a member .of the Judo
Club which took part In the
invitational at Indiana
University. This is the fl!,t
year women have been perJennlfer Mencblal
mitted to be members of the
Jud~ Club. Sbe is alao a
member of the University Ski High School, Miss Mencblnl
Club.
plans a trip to Italy late this
A 1968 graduate of Pomeroy summer.

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel
ALL THE UTTLE BAD HABITS ...
Dear Helen and Sue:
After reading all those SIJ8gestlona for nail-biters, and your
Idea about having readers ask help from other readers on THEIR
bad habits, I felt - "Thla Is for me!" Can anyone leU me bow I
can stop cracking my knuckles?
I've been doing thla for three years, and I dO!:J,l !Jllnk it's a
nervous habit- just a bad one. Already my knuckles are getting
blg,and by the time I'm l!O,my hands will look twice that old.
I do it unconsciously.
Help, anyone? - USA
Dear Usa:
Most bad habits (unless they're lied up with extreme nervousness) can be licked by transferring them from the unconsciout to the conscious.
Tell your friends, your family, your teachers not to hold
back: If they'll let you have it every time you get cracking, you'll
soon be aware of those noisy knuckles.- HELEN

+++
Dear Usa :
When you're alone, keep your hands busy,like with knitting
or crocheting. Use lots of hand lotion, and massage your
knuckles when you feel an urge to crack them. That's called
''transference" -substituting one motion for another, but it
sometimes works.
Now, readers, let's hear how you licked the habit. - SUE.

+++

Dear Rap :
Does anyone have a sure.fire cure for lying? This started
when I was in grade achool, and now I'm 21 and working. I don't'
think I could tell the absolute truth if my life depended on it.
I know it's wrong, but I fabricate some fantastic story and
out it comes. Don't know why I haven't been caught, but I usually
stick~ lies that can't be,pfi)Ved. My friends ~m to believeme.
~e In bed at night and think, "Why on-earth did -you say
that? ' Notblng was accompiiBbl!d by it. True, no one was hurt
(except me) but! know I need help. - LIAR
Dear Uar :
You can be darn sure your friends don't believe those lies,
but they go along because they wonder what wild story you'll
fal:ricate next.
Psychologlats say habitual liars are so insecure they can 'I
face the truth. Then again, you might be a frustrated actor who
needs the limelight- and your ''tale-wagging" DOES make you
the center of attention, right?
Whichever, you must understand yourself before you can
change. And professional help might burry along the transfonnation. - HELEN
Dear Readers :
There's another kind of liar too -the person who feeds you a
line to see how much you 'U S'!'allow.
I'm talking about the hoaxer from New Jersey who keeps
jlvin' us with a new "character" almost every week - but his
typewriter gives him away: we can recognize this guy by biB
damaged letter "S." (And also from his style, which might sell to
''torrid confessions" magazines.)
Maybe hi' needs help, or maybe he just wants to see his stuff
in print. (Wllich he won't - not in GENERATION RAP,
anyway.)- SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
How do you cure nail-biting ? Wear braces! If you need them,
that is. - PROBLEM SOLVED, but PARENTS BROKE

+++

Dear Rap :
I solved my nail-biting problem with an engagement ring.
Who wants to show it with a fist, lnstesd of an extended hand? If
' "biter" can't swing an engagement, why doesn't she buy a
gorgeous ring ? It helps! - KAREN

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks
and Mrs. Frances Scholl were
in Gallipolis Saturday to visit
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
Mary Beth and Tom.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Trout,
Columbus, were the weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Wiles and daugh~r .
Mr . and Mrs. Letcher Wine
&lt;1. Cleveland are the guesta of
herparents,Mr. an d Mrs. OsbY
Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Maag
spent the weekend in Columbus
with their grandchildren, Tracl
andSteven children&lt;i.Mr and
Mrs. Rlc~rd Lowe. Mr.' and

Mrs. Lowe Joined Mr ·and Mrs.
Mike Hammer for a weekend
In Cleveland where they went

especially for a bowling
banquet,
·

In 1963 some 250 persons
were killed in an earthquake in
northeast Libya.

.·Vif.ginia ·Trips Clemson
'

By

taken that was recommended
by the Confer~nce . The
statement read, in part: '.'Thll
ldmlnlatra'tion 's commltment
, to forging a new national policy
d respect for, and oervlee te,
older .
Americans
Ia
llgnificantly forwarded today
by the appointment qf Dr.
ArihlJr S. . FlellllJlinS as . my
special consultant on aging."
In biB addres:s to the conference ~n the last dsy (which
. one was the most memorable
of all the meetings) the
president said that the voice of
older Americans will be heard ·
In the Wblte House when
.
matters that affect the InA COURT OF HONOR waa held Sunday for Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249. Members at.
terests of older Americans are
tending were, front row,l-r, Jlm Rosenbaum, Greg Arnold, Dwayne McLaughlin, Danny Will,
being dlacussed.
Chuck Follrod, and Kevin McLaugblln; second row, Ed Stason, Doug ,Rosenbaum, Ralph Ar·
Dr , Flemming joins the
noa Paul Reed, Kevtn Betzlng, Harold Ssson, Joe Rosenbaum; third row I Tom Cassell,
administration, John B.
Scoutmaster
,
I Paul Warner I Merit Badge Counselor, and Richard Rosenbaum, Troop Com·
Martin, Commlasioner of the
mlttee Chllrman.
Administration on Aging In the
SENIOR CITIZENS .TURN TO "MR. ' EDDY" Department of Health,
Providing books for senior citizens of Meigs County through
Education and Welfare who Ia
the bookmobile is being emphasized tbla month. Here James
to lake on the additional
responsibilities: of a Special
Stohart browses on the bookmobile during tbe Racine Bank
Assistant to the President on
stop. Making books ·easily avaUable to senior citizens, as well
Aging, and double tiM! "senior
as others,ls one wayoffulfUilng a special need.
power" at the Wblle House.
Better federal assistance to the
Mrs . Vilma
Pikkoja , older people to do with the rest
librarian for · the Meigs- of their lives after they are no aging should be the result. ·
Jackson-Vinton Counties Book- longer working? Does our
ONE MILLION STRONG
mobile Service, was a delegate nation have any responsibility
was
the slogan for Ohio on the
wthe White House Conference for helping the elderly to find badges
we wore In Washington,
on Aging held in Washingwn, greater meaning and personal
and
these
one million Ohioana
D. C. last November.
satisfaction In the later years?
'Her report on the conference These questions are deeper are looking to give their vote
which she entitled "1972 - The and much more complex as for the best man who does give
a serious consideration for
Year of Action" is as follows: issues.
their special needs, that would
"Before !left for Washing ron
in December, a newspaper
ON THE SESSION on Special allow the aging to have a
life
after
clipping from a well known Concerns, the keynote speaker, meaningful
daily columnist was pinned to Sen. Jennings Randolph called retirement, but al8o if he' so
our office bulletin board, which it The 'Now Generation.' He wishes, allows him to "take It
told that the columnist, for one, wid about a little boy sitting on easY" after life long productiv~
had no illusions on the White the curb beside the . school work.
"It is one thing to be allowed
THE LIFE SCOUT award
House Conference on Aging, He playground cry in~ . An elderly
w
do
what
one
wishea,
but
quite
was
presented t~ Tom
had been to one already In 1001 gentleman out for a stroll
another
to
be
able
to
do
it."
Cassell by Paul Werner,
and he knew exactly what he stopped to comfort him. When
Tbla
is
a
year
of
action.
And
Merit Badge Councelor, at a
was going to do: find a seat asked the source of his
you
have
a
major
part
In
it.
If
It
Court of Honor of Pomeroy
close to the door and slip outfor unhappiness, the tittle boy
is
your
future,
you
hope
to
have
Boy Scout Troop Z49 Sunday.
a beer as often as he could,
pointed to the playground,
it,
if
It
is
Nowyou
have
it.
From the left are Tom
Well, the close-to-4,000 where several larger boys
And
this
ill
where
Pomeroy
Cassell, Scoutmaster, his
delegates did not agree with were laughing and shouting,
National
Bank
scores
as
a
son,
Tom receiving the
him. By an abnost perfect and the little boy said: "They
leader.
On
Feb.
11,
the
bank
preplanning, that is the benefit say I'm too little to play with.
The Life Scout award was
Harold Sisson, outgoing award from Paul Werner. ·
·
a
nnounced
free
checking
acof computer age and expertise them. They say I can't run or
presented to Tom Cassell, senior patrol leader, was
I guess, no one lacked a chair, jump or hit a ball good enough. count service to all persons member of Pomeroy Scout presented a senior patrol and three adults hiked the
but vacant chairs were not They're having a good time- over 65 years of age. Meigs Troop 249 at a Court of Honor leader patch as was his "Adahi Trail," a lotal of 19.8
County is doing Something for
obvious, either. The entrances but what about me?"
Sunday by Paul Werner, Merit brother, Ed Sisslon, the new miles. MedaiB for the outing
were very closely guarded The gentleman sensed this ita 13.8 pet. of population- and Badge Counselor.
senior patrol leader. Making went to Joe Rosenbaum, Doug
. only the delegates .wearing the. youngster's frustration, and it is action Now.
, , Troop Commit~ chairman the pre~tations ...was.- SS9Uk .... Rosenbaum 1, ,Ed Slssion, .. 1
official.badges were permitted ... comfor~ him, saying, ."Soon
, ,1U.chard Rosenbaum'gave t'be iriilster ~~ll . ,: . :.. .. :. Harola ~~otl,')¥Jjlph ·Arllil1Cr, "'' : 1
into conference haUs, without you wiU grow as big as they are
1
welcoming address"and senior ' Patrol leader bars were Greg Arnold and' Tom Cassell.
exception - an alternate had ... and then you'll be strong and
patrol leader, Ed Sission, led presented w Jim Rosenbaum
Recognized for attendance
coine on her own cost, paying tall and able to run and jump
the pledge to the Flag.
and Jeff Warner by Ed Sission. were Jeff Warner, Doug
$70 for the plane ticket, and she and hit a ball with the bigger
Tenderfoot Investiture was
Assistant patrol leader bars Rosenbaum, Danny Will and
had to return to her home state boys."
conducted
for
Kevin were presented to Chuck Ed Sission.
the next morning, as no adWith these words, the little
McLaughlin by Scoutmaster · Folirod and Doug Rosenbaum
Service Stars were awarded
.ditional people could be ac- boy dried his tears and, with a
Tom Cassell assisted by senior by patrol _leaders. Ubrarlan Morton Barnes, five years;
commodated. Those attending look of pleased revelation,
patrol leader Ed Sission and patch went to Ralph Arnold Kevin Betzing, three years;
had quite a bit at stake ; they skipped down the street.
Tom Cassell, Jr ., junior and quartermaster patch to Bruce Bumgarner, one year;
did have direct line to action to
At that point, the elderly man
assistant,scoutmaster. ·
Danny Will aod recruiter stripe Tom Cassell, 'five years; Ralph .
come.
who had been reassuring his
The Second Class award was w Dwane McLaughlin.
ArQold, three years; Mitchell
young friend sat down on the
presented w Jim Rosenbaum,
Summer camp to he held at Chapman, three years; Chuck
THE OPENING session of curb and sobbed:
Danny Will and Paul Reed by Camp Arrowhead from July 2-8 Follrod , one year ; Allan
RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cassell; First Class was discussed.
the Section On Retirement
"Yes, but what about me?"
McLaughlin, four years;
Roles and Activities, had Dr.
Sen. Randolph found a Herbert Roush of Racine R.D. award was presented to Ed
Advancement made by lroflli Dwane McLaughlin, two
Margaret Clark, Professor of parable in this story which gave a party Tuesday evening Sission by Patrick Wood."
members thus far are seven years; Paul Reed, one year;
•.
Anthropology in Residence could he applied w the con- at their home, for those
A vocal selection was boys from Tenderfoot through Tom Reed, six years; Doug
University of California , San sensus on national needs and assisting at their open bouse,
presented by Joe Rosenbaum, Ufe, in five months five merit Rosenbaum, four years; Joe
;
Francisco , as the main priorities. Over a period of on their 25th wedding an- junior . assistant scoutmaster. badgetwel1'earned, during the Rosenbaum, five years; Billy
•
speaker.
years there have been a con- niversary Jan. 9at the Sh.riners
Paul Werner presented merit pastil months troop members Slack, three years; Ed Slasion,
In her opening remarks she siderable number of hearings, aub House In Racine.
badges to Tom Cassell, first- have participated in three two years; Harold Slssion, five
stated that to formulate the studies, consultations and
Games were played with
aid and cycling, and Ralph overnight camps, six days at years; Jeff Warner, two years;
national policy regarding rules investigations on our aging prizes going to Raymond
..
and activities of retired people population. Yet the stark Adams, Roger Rolllh, Nancy Arnold, reading, safety and summer camp, three one day Danny Will, two years; Paul
events' (hikes) as well as Warner, eight years, Richard
in our society is a topic statistical evidence that nearly RUSiell and Harriett Nelgler. personal fitness.
The
Star
Scout
award
was
several
patrol hikes.
Rosenbaum, four years; Tom
somewhat less basic than those five million of our elderly Mrs. Etta Mae Hill won the
•
presented to Ralph Arnold by
One of the overnight camps Cassell, 24 years, and Pat
of some of the other sections - citizens live below the povery tbor prile.
'
Richard
Rosenbaum.
was
In
November
when
17
boys
Wood,
five
years.
we would all agree that level is difficult to accept. The
G111!sts were Mrs. Florence
provision of income, health finding that the economic Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
,,
care, and livable housing are problems of old age are Lewis of Clifton, Mr. and Mrs.
,.
required for the simple sur- growing - not decreasing - Ronald RUSiell of Middleport,
vival of older people . But, she and that a new class of Im- Mrs. Pearl Norrla, Mrs. Iva
concluded, that our topic was poverished citizens between Orr, Mrs. Guy Neigler,
in certain other ways even ages 60 and 64 has developed; Raymond Adama, Roger
more fundamental than these. these are matters of concern. Roush, Jeff Miner, Mrs. Bob
To find answers to questions
Last January ll,the Office of Hill, Mrs. Erma Wilson.
such as these: Does our society the White House Press
Refreshments of punch ;
BY JACK O'BRIAN
who never diadains the press. Probably because
coffee,
cake, Ice cream, sandneed ita older cctizens at all? Secretary
released · a
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
-There
are
Dollars
ill
biB dad's a top London Evening News aports.
Do they have a right to a place Statement by the ·President wiches, potato chips, and nuts
Decency
but
plainly,
bucks
In
bigotry:
"All
in
were
served.
writer ... Joan Rivers bad better check her
in our social order? What are confirming one of the actions
the Famlly" shorlly will publish ·''The Wil &amp; future ai!Brtment service: her new act Includes
'
Wi8dom of Archie Bunker" . and "The Edith whomps at her "doorman who makes obscene
Bunker Cookbook"; lllllllple recipe? First, phone calls on the house phone" and an elevator
slander two good egga? ... Old H'wood liberal operator ''who forgets biB route."
Dore Schary will confront dreary old British
The anti-Nixons war steps up: now
Fascist Party.founder Sir Oswald Mosley on Newsweek's trying to ignite palace
David Frost's hotseat; Sir Oswald will cop out; dissatlafacUon with ·an uncorroborated rumor
Dore will state Mosley's appearance Ia "against that Herb Klein, Nixon's longplay com.
munlcatlons chief, will leave the boss after the
election; does It actually suggest Nixon will lose
Fogarty to our cllnlc-llst: Ann's recovering (wanna bet?) or Ia it Klein-can't-llandle-TV in
the tap water that comes water is a safe drink and if .~are. Bottled water is fre- from surgery,
thiit video~g().()nly guesswork?
from their city water supply . you don't like the taste of quently not under the slrinFamed Dallas merchant king Stanley
Big scandal at J. F. Kennedy Airport:
There are stringent public )our local water it would be gent public. ~alth. ~ontrol (Nelman)Marcus lawrltinghlaautoblography;
'·
health regulations that con - useful in most instances. It that y~ur c1ty water IS .and no Howard Hughes-travail this time: Stanley doggie named "Brownie" has lived happUy in
'
trol the !actors that prevent is not without its dangers. for th.1s reason there 1s a ha.
the JFK baggage section at the International
fin off
'
•'•
the development of excess Bottled water with certain greater danger that It might s four e ers.
Arrlvala Bldg. for two years; now a Port
bacteria in such water .
normal chemicals for the c o n t a 1n some harmful
We reported the other day June Lockhart Authority stuffed brasshat has ordered Brownie
·
telling us she's been livinl for two years with. banished. The lads who have taken care of the
As far . as the claim that body in it was found to be germs.
..
the minerals in the water associated with a lot of inMany people In the world her "Jeaua Christ Superstar" Utl!H"Oler boy homeless mutt are getting Irked; that's hardly
will ca us e atherosclerosis . fections c au sin g bacterial live free of disease, using friend; small squawk now from June - not
this is totally without founda- shock tven though this medi- contaminated water, by boll· about that; just we'd spelled biB name WI"Oiig ... shrewd employe-relations In any book. . ·
Rodney Dangerfield says be's just turned
tion. In fact. various epidem- cally prepared sterile water mg the water. If water Is It's "Bob Corff..
..
·
iology studies designed ,to was administered in the hos- boiled for a sufficient length.
. . · .
· . . down $20,000 a week at Las Vegas' InMultl·nullionhetress .Consuelo Vanderbilt ternational; says he'd rather stsy In his own 2nd
:·oot out factors that are as- pital environment. The phar- of time it kills almost all
sociated with atherosclerosis maceutical house producing germs that we know of that Earle just had sold off a virtual zoo of anlmala, Ave. club. Sure ... Here's how Victor Borge first
have persistently turned up the bottled water for intra· cause any significant prob· lirdJ and pets collected over years; her sister
the interesting observation venous administration dis- !ems to the body . Th1s may Muriel died the other dsy and named Consie got In trouble with the Naziabefore he fled here:
still living then in Denmark, be said on hla radio
that heart aqacks and heart covered · after a long search !&gt;" one reas~n why h~t tea Is executor _ of 48 horses and 38 parrots
that
the
bottle
caps
had
bedisease seem to be less fre10 the Ortent.
Another late-late arrival In the cllnlc~lst: ~: ptogram, "It's wrong to call the Nazla doga - ·
quent in locations where come contaminated in the so popular
INIWIPA"' '""m'SI &gt;~IN.)
Renee Black, widow of the Waldorf-Astoria's they lift their arms" ... Our gain.
there is hn rr/ wntrr a11(1 tots process. Nothing is 100 per
The youth-kultur insists 'half the U. S. Is
o( mi11em l ill tile water. The cent sat e.
famed top hotelier, is In Lenox Hill Hospital.
"under 25"; not so- our population now Is 208'
Unless the sp1·ing water.
diffe rence isn't much. bul it
Pf..H •••d ,.._
r •••stions ond John, Carson came back all refreshed after m!UIQII
hollled
or
nol,
or
well
water
,and half the country Ia .under 21 ...
com.,..IJ 10 · Llwrenco f. I.Dmb, f · ed
k off fr
.
certai nl y shoots down any
Wbllo a Jrc . wee
om biB prHmptiQII by the Probability - the median age will grow older:
idea Ihal the min•rals cat•sc or other source·; of water M.D., in core of this
atherosclerosis.
·
h a v e bren rarefully r~gu ­ Dr. Lomb conool •...., iiHir.ill..l OlympiCS on NBC-TV and plainly reaented the becaUBe of lirth control plua very deflnlte
' Ia ted by lh~ J' 1blic health 1r11or1, ,. .,;., •••••r ,.,.., t1 clean sport Invasion - then swiftly fielded a
,.,,,allY. hottl t•~ d i , l i fl~rt · d j!P tlr· ~, i1 i ~ l ~s~ liiH•Iy h1 he ftrtrrol inrertost in '"''"• col"'""~· filthy mouthful ...·Ollver Reed is a British star longevity of the &amp;Ked via geriatric dlacoverles,
elise--cutes etc.
·

.

Ranks Raised at

Court of Honor

Open House
Helpers
at Party

Voice along Br'Way
.

. . thdted Pnea lllltftllllenal
Afterwlnning18ofltafirst 111
games Virginia was upset
twice 1aat week, bowing to
Penn Stale and Duke and had
to lllrugste -Monday nlgbt to
beat Uenuion,IIUO, In the last
four llelpnds. of play.
Sco McCandlish
• . tt
dropped in
a pair of foul sltots with four
seconds left 19 give VIrginia the
victOry after the loth-ranked
Cavaliers lost a seven-point
,lead In !he second half.
' Jim Hobgood led Virginia
•
·
,with 1. points while Buddy
Odie was ' high man for
Clemson with 16. ·
rn other actton Involving
rated clubs, No. 1 ranked
UCLA remained unbeaten by
crushing Washington State,~
5~, Southwe,tern LoUisiana
(12) beat Northeast Louisiana,
IIU1, Kentucky · (15i..r)ppeq
Georgia, 87-63, and. Marshall
(16) defeated St. Francis
(Pa.), 95-80.
Keith . WUkes and Larry
Hollyfield scored 16 points each
and sophomore center Bill
Wsllon hit tklf-7 shots while
compiling .15 points and 19
rebounds as UCLA rolled over
Washington State. The topranked Bruins took a 9-0 lead
and never were in trouble,
hitting over 57 per cent of their

'

GREENVILLE, Tex .
(UP!)- Zlg-ug running back
Duane Thomas, the player who
rushed the most and said the
least for the Super Bowl
champion Dallas Cowboys,
pleaded guilty to having
marijuana Monday and
received a five-year probated
prison sentence.
Thom~s appeared In COurt
clean-shaven, wear Ing · a
conservative broWn suit. Hla
answers to Judge Hollis
Garmon ~ere stn'ctly "Yes,
"
sir, your honor."
Thomas' 21-year-old brother
entered the same plea and got
the ilame sentenCl!. Tbe two
br th
sled J 30

. Dear Dr. La~b - I ha ve
Just read a book m wh1ch the
author cla1ms that sprmg
water , well water, river or
Jake water or tap water is
unfit to drink because they
all contain inorganic minera is that form deposits in the
arteries, causing. atheroslerosi s which shortens life.
The author cia1m s that distilled water is the only water
which is fit to drink. May I
please have your opinion on
what kind of water is ·best
and safest to drink ? I am
concerned about whether or
not the bones might 'become
brittle from lack of calcium
il one were to drink only di stmed water.

GULLE1T SIGNS
CINCINJIIATI ( UPI) Doo Gullett, the Cioclnnall
Reds' top pltcber last year
with. a 18-8 record, has slped
his contract for this seasoo,
'the' club aonounced here
today.
Gullett, Zl, a left-bander,
posted a 2.84 earned run
average .and threw three
shutouts lltst year. Tbe Lyun,
Ky., oatlve II the 29th Cln·
ciunall player to sign for the
upcoming season: Eight
players are yet to sign.

L
'
ee

Bud Stallworth's 30 points
carried Kansas to a 71-59 rout
or Colorado and Kansas State
moved Into a tie roc the Big
Eight lead with. -Missouri by
crushing Oklahoma State, 7452. Reggie Ball and Charles
Dudley combined for U points
as Washington ~!eat Southern
California, 78-82, and BID
Ligon's 28 points carried
Vanderbilt to a 111-&amp;1 victory
over .Alabama,
Chris Ford scored 29 points
and Hank Slemiontkowskl had
· 19 points and 18 rebounds as
Villanova beat Bollton College,
n-10, while David Brent's 25
points lifted Jacksonville to an
8U9 rout of South Alabama.

Bowling GreeD Has
New 7-Foot Center
·

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio footer decides to attend a ·
(UPI)-8even-foot center school In the Mid-American
Mark Cartwright a University Conference.
of Marylal)d · sophomore who
"We're proud to get a player
dldri't think he bad much of a of Mark's abillty and we know
future at the school because of he can play a key role in puttbiB much-beralded sophomore ing Bowling Green on the map
·teammate Tom McMillen, will as a basketball power," Haley
play the rest of hla coUegiate said.
basketball at Bowling Green
Bowling Green, without a
State University.,
senior on the squad and suf.
qartwrlght, a . high school ferlng one of Its worst
All·American, dropped out at basketball seasons, is 3-17. ·
Maryland three weekS ago
Cartwright averaged 27.2
alter playing back-up to Mc- points and 17.2 reboUI!ds per
Millen and seeing limited game biB senior year at Niles
action.
West, m., High School and was
Bowling Green athletic offi- named All-American.
cials -announced late Monday
potential of a great future,
that Cartwright l"ould enroll
"DO you understand you bere for the spring term and
have w follow the law wtJether become eligible for the 1973-74
it's a good or bad law?" the sea9on, after sitting out next
judge asked Thomas.
·
season because of NCAA rules.
"Yes, sir, your honor," · Cartwright will be classified
Thomas said.
as a junior for the 1973-74 sea"Will you have the power to son and will have two years of By United Press lntern8lional
disassociate yourself from ellgltillty at Bowling Green.
Six Ohio college basketball
anybody who might have a bad
Since leaving Maryland,
Influence on you.,..
where he SC9red 110 points and games are on tap tonight,
Lo 1high-f
"
lighted
·
by
the
yo a o
"Yes sir, your honor.
bad ..
" rebounds in 15 games, Chicago contest with Ohio
Uni·
"There will probably be Cartwright has been heavily versity at Athens.
great temptations. You have to recruited by schools across the
The other contests include
be strong enough to resist and . country. He reportedly bad.
h 'dr
. Urbana at Kenyon, Anderson
not be associated wit
ugs or narrowed his choices to (Ind.) at Bluffton, Wilmington
11
anything like that. Do you te
Western Kentucky, Iowa State, at Cedarville, Findlay at Deme yo~\ have the strength to Utah and Bowling Green.
fisrweand Mercyhurst (Pa.) at
resist these temptations?"
Bowling Green apparently
.
"Yes, sir, your honor."
had an Inroad to Cartwright Walsh.
.
· ,Judge'\\ddniuei"~d :: ..\iecaujf' ill::a!@.~ot, '(!Ciq :. ~In the o~ly Monday night
· The ju~·e then addreJlled
hn H ft' .&lt;:.... •• 1• 1
.,h games, DaVIdson beat Dayton
, "" ,
· ' · · . • ·,Jo
e 8 .......,.... ance wt, · '· 854&gt;9 and SteubenviUe whipped
Bertrand,Thomas, the younger !he 18-yearold native of Morton California (Pa.) IOI.:tll.
brother·
Grove, D1.
Da 'dson 1 · tho ·
"I underst.,d you're going
Heft worked at Maryland's
. VI
• P aymg a
me m
to go to college. You have got to basketball camp last summer, ~~~~~-;·;::e~ aD~~~~
want to go straight and do where Cartwright was a stuH d Coach T
H Uand
1
right. All can~ Is give you dent~ructor.
ust!'ed to his w~s ~n the
the opportunity, he said.
Bowling Green Offlciala said
di froni bo 'tsl bed HDI·
Garmon then said be wanted academic considerations also ~dosufi ~ Bpi lnj · in
the court's records to show entered Into Cartwright's decie an eye ury a
''the parties have conducted si Official ~
!bed Cart- handball game and was or.
. .
on.
s \"escr
dered to rest In bed to allow a
themaelves m a gentleman.uke wright aa a serious student, blood lot to ~·-·I
manner ·"
. art · BowI'1ng
c forward
.._,Joeve.Sutter led
major Ing ID
Junior
Tbe Cowboys, who _have Green's school of art has a Da ldson with
20 lnt So hweathered· past controverstes good academic reputation.
~e guard 0o::O s~i.t. fed
with their explosive running
Heft was at Cartwright's su- Dayto with 25 lnts and John
back, bad no comment Qll the burban Chicago home Monday Bittern tided ~
sentence. A team spoke11111811 and notified athletic officialsa
·
said at present there were no here of Cartwright's decision.
''special plans" for Thomas. Cartwright visited the campus
SALE SET
In New York, a spokesman here last Thursday.
Evangeline Chapter, Order
for the National Foot~all
"We're tremendously of the Eastern Star, will have a
League said Commissioner . pleased that Mark bad decided soup sale Friday. Residents
Peter Rozelle would probably to attend Bowling Green," said wanting worder soup may do
not have anything to say until head Co8ch Pat Haley. "It's so until noon Thuraday by
he had studied the entire court not every day that a high telephoning 992-3335, 992-5178
proceeding.
school All-American apd a 7: or 99:&amp;-.'1748.

LoyoIa A1

a Sunday afternoon.
Travel Restricted
"You are not to leave Hunt
County or Dallas County
without pennlsslon of the
probation officer or without the
court's knowledge," Garmon .
said. "You will be under some
·~- t
ts1
cons....n superv on as you
travel about the country."
Garmon said be probllted the
sentence for the 24-year-old
football player because "you
are a young prson and ba.ve the

More Security With

FALSE TEETH
At AnyTime
Afraid fat.e teeth will drop at the
wrollJ time? A denture adhMive ean
help. FASTEETH0 Powder lfivu
dentureo a lonpr, ftrmer, oteadlor
hold. Why be emharn.d! For more
11euri_ty and comfort 1 un FAS_TEETH Dellturo Adheoive Powder.
Dontureo thai ftt are -•tial to
heoltb. See your dentltt I'Oiulariy.

IF YOU SAW SOMETHING IN
THIS NEWSPAPER THAT

you'd really like...

BALTIMORE (UP!) - That trade with the Philadelp)lia letting the game slip away.
axiom that athletes try harder 76ers, poured In 30 points Clark's jump Bhol put the
against teams that traded against his ex-teammates in a BuUets ahead, 102-101, but the
them away was proved once nationally televised contest, 76ers blew a chance to win the
again Monday by Archie Clark includihg the wiming hasket game when Fred .Foster
with. 21 seconds to play, as the missed a layup with five
of the Baltimore Bullets.
Bullets
scored a hard-earned seconds to play.
Clark, who came to the
Jack Marin and Wes Unseld
Bullets earlier this season in a 102-101 victory .
The triumph was an impor- slso played Important roles In
tant one for the Bullets and the the Bullets' victory as Marin
loss a costly one for the 76ers. scored 24 POints and Unseld
By winning, Baltimore boosted pulled down 19 rebounds.
Virginia at Denver
Dallas at Pittsburgh
its lead in the National
Foster and Bob Rule each got
(Only games scheduled)
21
points for tbe 78era.
Basketball
Association
's
College Basketball Results
By United Pres~ · International Central Division to four and
Both teams 1ri1l see action
Vincennes 19 Burlington 77
one-half games while the loss again tonight, with the Bullela
Marshall 95 St. Fran., Pa. 80
dropped Philadelphia closer to traveling to Buffalo and the
Ky. tOO Morehed St. 97, ot
Cheyney St. 85 Mlllersvl St. 61 playoff elimination in the 76ers going to Chicago. In other
New~ry 89 Claflin 87
Atlantic Division.
action, Phoenix Ia at Boston In
~All
Pfeiffer 89 Campbell 86
W0 dnes-y
Philadelphia
had
a
sevenan afternoon game, Portland at
ernoon
High Pr . 70 Appalachian 61
Leegue
Belmont
Ab.
73
Wash&amp;
Lee
71
point
lead,
7!1-72,
after
three
New York, Detroit at Los
Feb. 16 • 1972
Vanderbilt 111 Alabama 91
quarters and was leading, 101- Angeles and Seattle at Golden
Team
Stondints
Miss. St. 62 Auburn 60
100, with. 1:11 to go before State.
Baum's Lumber
~2 ~ Lafayetle 87 Gettysbg 78
'
Roanoke 79 Tulane 62
72 oiO Oicknsn
Team No. 4
95 Moravian 81
Gaul's Shake Haven
64 48 Villanova 92 Bos. Colt. 70
VVelker's
Ashland
53
59 Furman "" West Vir. 96
Team No. 1
5() 62
•r
HIGHLIGHTs---:
Ridenour's T.V.
27 85 51. Louis 76 No. Tex. St. 69
High Individual Game - S.W. La. 112 N.E. La. 91
·
with Paul Crabtr"e
Mildred Gaul 168.
Rider 91 Bucknell 84
Second High Ind. Game _ New Hamp. 88 Hawthorne 61
CALl POINTVIEW : 992·2505
Barbara Murray 161.
Austin Peay 68 East Tenn . St.
High Series - Flossie 45(). 67
c
30
Second Hlnh Series _ Eastern . Ky . 92 Mid . Tenn . 91
With the President's
Issue" on h. lOaf 10: p.m.
Barbara Murray 434.
Wayland 98 Bishop 93
globelrolling In the news,
looks Into how space
Team High Game _ Team East Texas 75 Sui Ross .64 .. . what better lime io bring out
technology has benefitted
No 4 304
·S.F. Auslln 89 McMurry 74
'dur favorn~· 'Gtllbetrl1tten ~
the consumer.
·
Team High_. Series _ Ba, um's .· Cor pus. c. hr.!•.ti. 104 -Texao_.. A&amp; I · •from ' 1!1an.m11nMeadowlerk ...
' "»' •, .... .J..+ •&gt;t •.. • ... -·
78
lemon and Co .. 1'/,h,o ,t\ave
MOVIES : "September • ·d·
1y
80
Lumber
·
'
Prairie View 124 Wylie 100
been delighting audiences
Storm," Joanne Dru, 4 p.m.,
Ark. St. 98 Trinity, Tex. 75
for more than a generation,
and "Battleground/' Van
Tri-County League
Centenary 87 Texas, Arl. 80
have a special at 8:30p.m.,
Johnson, 11 :30p.m., both Ch.
Standings
Jaxnvt 82 South Ala . 59
Chs. 2 &amp; 7. The guest list is
10.
Team
Pis.
Kansas
St.
74
Okla
.
St.
52
too
long
to
list,
but
suffice
if
+ ++
42 Kansas 71 Colorado 59
Larry's Ashland
to
say
that
with
Jean
(Edith
VVith
the
press of business,
34 Monmouth Colt. 96 Pratt 66
Davis Werner Ins.
Bunker) Stapleton as an
I've never caught the new
Pomeroy Cement Block
2286 Utah St. 100 Mont. St. 76
announcer, Robert Goulet as
daytime kids' show, "Watch
~~wesl\nongseOodge
N.W
.
La.
92
McNeese
St.
80
referee,
and
Pat
Boone
Your Child ·- The Mt Too
26
Angelo
St
84
Tarleton
78
among
!he
opposing
players,
:
Show"
yet. But Ed McMahon
Holsum Bakery
12 Air Force· 87 Col "'est St 59 .,, sounds l1"ke fun .
Is reading f avor If e otd
High IndiVIdual Ga me
·
"
·
·
R""is 89 Colorado Mines 76
Highly recommended.
children's
storlel
week.
George Wrtoh!
·•
7 (J sn 'tthis
II awf
• 238.
NewMex.
St. 81 Denver ·46
+++
1p.m., Ch ..
uII Y
Second High Ind. Game VVesfern N.M. 107 N.M Hilnds
We spent $24 billion and
early for Ed to be up?)
Bill Radford 213.
put a man on Ihe moon. VVhat
+++
88
High Series - Paul Harris Tex. Sou . 71 East. New Mex. 59 were the practical benefits
Pt . Pleasant at Hurricane
619
·
Prllnd St · 79 Gn~a 72
·and conse.auences for those
basketball ~ame on Cable
Second
High Seri es Carngle Mlln
7'1 eneva 75
of us left own here? "The
TV Ch. 5. ( lve Audio).
George Wright 599.
9
Team 1053.
High Game _ Davis .-~VV:I:Ik~es:_:10~1~L~y=co:m:i:ng~1~--~:::::::::::::::~~~~~
Warner
Team High Series
Firestone 3024.
Beginners League
•
Feb. 11, r972
Standings
Team
Pis.
Misfits
28
Red Devils
22
Four Aces
22
Four Deuces
18
Lucky Stars
16
Bombers
14
Hlah Individual Game - R.
Roach 226; J. White 184.
Second High Ind. Game - R.
Roach 201 ; J, White 174.
•,,
High Series - R. Roach 582;
J. White 528.
Second High Series - C.
Reed 479; 0. Hawley 435.
Team High Game
Red
Devils 785.
.
Team High Serll!s - ·Red
Devils 2099.
Veterans Memorial
Hospifol League
Feb. 15, 1972
Standings
Team
Pis.
Hit &amp;Misses
14
Gutter Bums
10
The Opens .
8
Straight Shooters
0
High Ind. Game
Becky
' Anderson 147.
Second High Ind . Game Sandy Sargent 1-16.
High Ind. Series - Becky
Anderson 399.
Second High Ind. Series Bessie Sylvester 391.
Team High Series - Hit &amp;
Misses 1306.
Team High Game· - The
Opens 494.

College Scores

Local Bowling

\.\\~\\TV

.......

•

And

City Loan financing is the answer! Buying an automobile direct
from the owner? Call City Loan for the money. Making a major
purchase from a dealer? It will pay you to ask him for thrifty City
Loari "Aclion-Pian Financing ."

When money is the question .. .".,...._.

you get·ln Pinta-

)

for aWlawer priCe.

The Daily Sentinel
OEVOTEO TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .

is the a11$wer

VW Il L .. ..... .. $2119

One teat drive w\11 ahow you plenty : Pinto 's
American expressway power. Precise han·
dllng rack-and-pinion ateerlf'!Q. Wide t tance
for better atabltlly . And morel
•BIMd '" t to mptrlson ol tllchr prices lor bue 2·door
modtls. Optlorw l Whitt Sldtwtlla. A«:ent Grou p t nd Rnr

.

City Editor
Published 'd liiV eM c epl
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POMEROY, 0.

Sfn. lnel .

~
I

Clark Hero In Bullets Victory

15
the Ford Team.

-r.

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ABA Standings
By United Press International
'
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Kentucky
51 12 .810 '"
Virginia
38 26 .594 13112
New York
29 35 .453 22'12
Floridians
26 38 .405 25 112
Carolina
25 39 .391 261!2
Pittsburgh
22 41 .349 29
VVest
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
44 20 .688 ...
Indiana
36 27 .571 7'12
Dallas
31 35 .470 14
Denver
25 37 .403 18
Memphis
23 40 .365 20112
Mondoy's Results
New York 104 Dallas 95
Utah 14'1 Pittsburgh 140
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

&amp;JUTHERN'S RESERVE BASKETBALL squad ended Its season with. a 9-9 record. Front
row, 1-r, Bob Mlller, Mitch Nease, Vern Ord, Randy Warner, David Theiss, and Charles
KnighUng; back row, Coach Duane Wolfe, Randy Forbes, Dennis Hawk, Norman Curfman,
Wayne Ueland and Barry Theiss.

..

..

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NBl' SI•I!Ciintl
By Unllod Prell lnlernollonol
Eosltrn Conltronce
Allontic Division
W. L Pet. GB
Boston
« 23 · .657
New York
oiO 24 .625 21h
Philadelphia 25 o10 .375 18
Buffalo
17 -16 .270 25
Centro I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
28 35 .444 ...
Allanta
24 o10 .375 4V,
Cincinnati
20 « .313 8V2
Cleveland
19 47 .288 tov,
VVestern Conforence
Midwest Division
W, L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
52 15 .776 ...
Chicago
-16 20 .691 5'h
Phoenix
41 25 .621 101fl
De lroit
22 42 .3« 28'12
Pacific Division
.
W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles 54 9 .857 ...
Seattle
o10 25 .615 15
Golden Slate 39 25 .111/ 15112
Houston
25 39 .391 291/2
Portland
15 52 .224 41
Monday's Result
Balllmore 102 Phlla 101
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesdey'a Gllme.Phoenix at !loston
Portland at New York
Detroit at Los ·Angeles
Seattle-Golden Stale
At Oakland
Baltimore at Buffalo
Philadelphia at ,Chicago

QU To.rug•ht.

~~sw!":J~ lhll~im .
'Ill~ ,..~"'=u-··· ··· ..
50 mUea norlhelist of ua as on

Minerals Safe in Drinking·Water.:::~m::;.~s.:;:::~~
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

In contention.
ll
h d 23 ' t
d
Dwlgbt Lamar, the nation's
Russe
a
pom san
leading scorer, 1! 41 points as Tyrone Collins added 18 as
.SOuthwestern Loulalana rolled Marshall beat St. Francis.
00 Its 21st victory In 23 games , Mike D'Antoni hit five straight
by
beating
Northeast · baskets to brl!8k open the game
Loulstana. Roy Ebron added 36 in the second half.
points and took down 24
Elaewllere, Harry Robers
scored 'lT points to lead St.
rebounds for the Ragin' l.oiil.s to a 7a.. triumph over
Cajuns.
·
......
d J
Jlm Andrews scored 32 Nor:th •c:ras 8tate an
oe
points as Kentucky beat Sutter's 20 points carried.
Georgia to maintain a half. Davidson to an 85-$ victory
game lead In th~ Southeastern over Dayton. Ruas Hlint bad 'lT
Conference. Second-place points, Todd Brenizer hit 22
and Bud Bierly 20 to overcome
Tennessee,
w1th
Len a 45-polnt effort . by Wil
Kosmalski scoring 25 points,
. i:dged Florida, 511-42, to remain Robinson and lead Furman to a
9is6 overllme trtumpb over
18l8if( ,
d .ii[ ;;w West Virginia.
shots.

Thomas Pleads Guilty,
Placed On Probation

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
They Won't Cause Atherosclerosis

DAY POSTPONED
. There Will not be a free
clothing day lhla month at 'J'tJe
Salvation Army, Butternut
Reader- My response
Ave., Pomeroy. A new da~ for to Dear
the. boo k you read IS
the obeervance will be an- ''Rubb1sh !" The safest water nounced later,
for most people lo dri nk is
I

Conference on
g
Points to Action ·Year

.,

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,•

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
461 South Third St.

I''

•

Middleport

�- ..
'
,_ 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pooleroy, 0,. Feb. 22, 1972

· "--' '111e DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972

Jenny MenchiniHonored
Jennifer (Jenny) Mencblni,
daughter of Mrs . Renzo
Menchini, Pomeroy, and the
late Dr. Menchlnl, bas been
named to Sigma Theta Tau,
national nursing honorary . .,
A senior at Ohio State
University where she will
graduate In -June with a BS
degree in nursing, Miss
Menchini is also a member of
the Torch Club, Ohio State
nursing honorary. At Ohio
State, Miss Menchini bas been
a member of the Karate Club
and was a "little sister" of ·
Delta Upsilon Fraternity.
She is a member .of the Judo
Club which took part In the
invitational at Indiana
University. This is the fl!,t
year women have been perJennlfer Mencblal
mitted to be members of the
Jud~ Club. Sbe is alao a
member of the University Ski High School, Miss Mencblnl
Club.
plans a trip to Italy late this
A 1968 graduate of Pomeroy summer.

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel
ALL THE UTTLE BAD HABITS ...
Dear Helen and Sue:
After reading all those SIJ8gestlona for nail-biters, and your
Idea about having readers ask help from other readers on THEIR
bad habits, I felt - "Thla Is for me!" Can anyone leU me bow I
can stop cracking my knuckles?
I've been doing thla for three years, and I dO!:J,l !Jllnk it's a
nervous habit- just a bad one. Already my knuckles are getting
blg,and by the time I'm l!O,my hands will look twice that old.
I do it unconsciously.
Help, anyone? - USA
Dear Usa:
Most bad habits (unless they're lied up with extreme nervousness) can be licked by transferring them from the unconsciout to the conscious.
Tell your friends, your family, your teachers not to hold
back: If they'll let you have it every time you get cracking, you'll
soon be aware of those noisy knuckles.- HELEN

+++
Dear Usa :
When you're alone, keep your hands busy,like with knitting
or crocheting. Use lots of hand lotion, and massage your
knuckles when you feel an urge to crack them. That's called
''transference" -substituting one motion for another, but it
sometimes works.
Now, readers, let's hear how you licked the habit. - SUE.

+++

Dear Rap :
Does anyone have a sure.fire cure for lying? This started
when I was in grade achool, and now I'm 21 and working. I don't'
think I could tell the absolute truth if my life depended on it.
I know it's wrong, but I fabricate some fantastic story and
out it comes. Don't know why I haven't been caught, but I usually
stick~ lies that can't be,pfi)Ved. My friends ~m to believeme.
~e In bed at night and think, "Why on-earth did -you say
that? ' Notblng was accompiiBbl!d by it. True, no one was hurt
(except me) but! know I need help. - LIAR
Dear Uar :
You can be darn sure your friends don't believe those lies,
but they go along because they wonder what wild story you'll
fal:ricate next.
Psychologlats say habitual liars are so insecure they can 'I
face the truth. Then again, you might be a frustrated actor who
needs the limelight- and your ''tale-wagging" DOES make you
the center of attention, right?
Whichever, you must understand yourself before you can
change. And professional help might burry along the transfonnation. - HELEN
Dear Readers :
There's another kind of liar too -the person who feeds you a
line to see how much you 'U S'!'allow.
I'm talking about the hoaxer from New Jersey who keeps
jlvin' us with a new "character" almost every week - but his
typewriter gives him away: we can recognize this guy by biB
damaged letter "S." (And also from his style, which might sell to
''torrid confessions" magazines.)
Maybe hi' needs help, or maybe he just wants to see his stuff
in print. (Wllich he won't - not in GENERATION RAP,
anyway.)- SUE

+++
Dear Helen and Sue :
How do you cure nail-biting ? Wear braces! If you need them,
that is. - PROBLEM SOLVED, but PARENTS BROKE

+++

Dear Rap :
I solved my nail-biting problem with an engagement ring.
Who wants to show it with a fist, lnstesd of an extended hand? If
' "biter" can't swing an engagement, why doesn't she buy a
gorgeous ring ? It helps! - KAREN

Pomeroy ...
Personal Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks
and Mrs. Frances Scholl were
in Gallipolis Saturday to visit
Mr. and Mrs. John Weeks,
Mary Beth and Tom.
Mr. and Mrs. Tim Trout,
Columbus, were the weekend
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Wiles and daugh~r .
Mr . and Mrs. Letcher Wine
&lt;1. Cleveland are the guesta of
herparents,Mr. an d Mrs. OsbY
Martin,
Mr. and Mrs. Bradford Maag
spent the weekend in Columbus
with their grandchildren, Tracl
andSteven children&lt;i.Mr and
Mrs. Rlc~rd Lowe. Mr.' and

Mrs. Lowe Joined Mr ·and Mrs.
Mike Hammer for a weekend
In Cleveland where they went

especially for a bowling
banquet,
·

In 1963 some 250 persons
were killed in an earthquake in
northeast Libya.

.·Vif.ginia ·Trips Clemson
'

By

taken that was recommended
by the Confer~nce . The
statement read, in part: '.'Thll
ldmlnlatra'tion 's commltment
, to forging a new national policy
d respect for, and oervlee te,
older .
Americans
Ia
llgnificantly forwarded today
by the appointment qf Dr.
ArihlJr S. . FlellllJlinS as . my
special consultant on aging."
In biB addres:s to the conference ~n the last dsy (which
. one was the most memorable
of all the meetings) the
president said that the voice of
older Americans will be heard ·
In the Wblte House when
.
matters that affect the InA COURT OF HONOR waa held Sunday for Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249. Members at.
terests of older Americans are
tending were, front row,l-r, Jlm Rosenbaum, Greg Arnold, Dwayne McLaughlin, Danny Will,
being dlacussed.
Chuck Follrod, and Kevin McLaugblln; second row, Ed Stason, Doug ,Rosenbaum, Ralph Ar·
Dr , Flemming joins the
noa Paul Reed, Kevtn Betzlng, Harold Ssson, Joe Rosenbaum; third row I Tom Cassell,
administration, John B.
Scoutmaster
,
I Paul Warner I Merit Badge Counselor, and Richard Rosenbaum, Troop Com·
Martin, Commlasioner of the
mlttee Chllrman.
Administration on Aging In the
SENIOR CITIZENS .TURN TO "MR. ' EDDY" Department of Health,
Providing books for senior citizens of Meigs County through
Education and Welfare who Ia
the bookmobile is being emphasized tbla month. Here James
to lake on the additional
responsibilities: of a Special
Stohart browses on the bookmobile during tbe Racine Bank
Assistant to the President on
stop. Making books ·easily avaUable to senior citizens, as well
Aging, and double tiM! "senior
as others,ls one wayoffulfUilng a special need.
power" at the Wblle House.
Better federal assistance to the
Mrs . Vilma
Pikkoja , older people to do with the rest
librarian for · the Meigs- of their lives after they are no aging should be the result. ·
Jackson-Vinton Counties Book- longer working? Does our
ONE MILLION STRONG
mobile Service, was a delegate nation have any responsibility
was
the slogan for Ohio on the
wthe White House Conference for helping the elderly to find badges
we wore In Washington,
on Aging held in Washingwn, greater meaning and personal
and
these
one million Ohioana
D. C. last November.
satisfaction In the later years?
'Her report on the conference These questions are deeper are looking to give their vote
which she entitled "1972 - The and much more complex as for the best man who does give
a serious consideration for
Year of Action" is as follows: issues.
their special needs, that would
"Before !left for Washing ron
in December, a newspaper
ON THE SESSION on Special allow the aging to have a
life
after
clipping from a well known Concerns, the keynote speaker, meaningful
daily columnist was pinned to Sen. Jennings Randolph called retirement, but al8o if he' so
our office bulletin board, which it The 'Now Generation.' He wishes, allows him to "take It
told that the columnist, for one, wid about a little boy sitting on easY" after life long productiv~
had no illusions on the White the curb beside the . school work.
"It is one thing to be allowed
THE LIFE SCOUT award
House Conference on Aging, He playground cry in~ . An elderly
w
do
what
one
wishea,
but
quite
was
presented t~ Tom
had been to one already In 1001 gentleman out for a stroll
another
to
be
able
to
do
it."
Cassell by Paul Werner,
and he knew exactly what he stopped to comfort him. When
Tbla
is
a
year
of
action.
And
Merit Badge Councelor, at a
was going to do: find a seat asked the source of his
you
have
a
major
part
In
it.
If
It
Court of Honor of Pomeroy
close to the door and slip outfor unhappiness, the tittle boy
is
your
future,
you
hope
to
have
Boy Scout Troop Z49 Sunday.
a beer as often as he could,
pointed to the playground,
it,
if
It
is
Nowyou
have
it.
From the left are Tom
Well, the close-to-4,000 where several larger boys
And
this
ill
where
Pomeroy
Cassell, Scoutmaster, his
delegates did not agree with were laughing and shouting,
National
Bank
scores
as
a
son,
Tom receiving the
him. By an abnost perfect and the little boy said: "They
leader.
On
Feb.
11,
the
bank
preplanning, that is the benefit say I'm too little to play with.
The Life Scout award was
Harold Sisson, outgoing award from Paul Werner. ·
·
a
nnounced
free
checking
acof computer age and expertise them. They say I can't run or
presented to Tom Cassell, senior patrol leader, was
I guess, no one lacked a chair, jump or hit a ball good enough. count service to all persons member of Pomeroy Scout presented a senior patrol and three adults hiked the
but vacant chairs were not They're having a good time- over 65 years of age. Meigs Troop 249 at a Court of Honor leader patch as was his "Adahi Trail," a lotal of 19.8
County is doing Something for
obvious, either. The entrances but what about me?"
Sunday by Paul Werner, Merit brother, Ed Sisslon, the new miles. MedaiB for the outing
were very closely guarded The gentleman sensed this ita 13.8 pet. of population- and Badge Counselor.
senior patrol leader. Making went to Joe Rosenbaum, Doug
. only the delegates .wearing the. youngster's frustration, and it is action Now.
, , Troop Commit~ chairman the pre~tations ...was.- SS9Uk .... Rosenbaum 1, ,Ed Slssion, .. 1
official.badges were permitted ... comfor~ him, saying, ."Soon
, ,1U.chard Rosenbaum'gave t'be iriilster ~~ll . ,: . :.. .. :. Harola ~~otl,')¥Jjlph ·Arllil1Cr, "'' : 1
into conference haUs, without you wiU grow as big as they are
1
welcoming address"and senior ' Patrol leader bars were Greg Arnold and' Tom Cassell.
exception - an alternate had ... and then you'll be strong and
patrol leader, Ed Sission, led presented w Jim Rosenbaum
Recognized for attendance
coine on her own cost, paying tall and able to run and jump
the pledge to the Flag.
and Jeff Warner by Ed Sission. were Jeff Warner, Doug
$70 for the plane ticket, and she and hit a ball with the bigger
Tenderfoot Investiture was
Assistant patrol leader bars Rosenbaum, Danny Will and
had to return to her home state boys."
conducted
for
Kevin were presented to Chuck Ed Sission.
the next morning, as no adWith these words, the little
McLaughlin by Scoutmaster · Folirod and Doug Rosenbaum
Service Stars were awarded
.ditional people could be ac- boy dried his tears and, with a
Tom Cassell assisted by senior by patrol _leaders. Ubrarlan Morton Barnes, five years;
commodated. Those attending look of pleased revelation,
patrol leader Ed Sission and patch went to Ralph Arnold Kevin Betzing, three years;
had quite a bit at stake ; they skipped down the street.
Tom Cassell, Jr ., junior and quartermaster patch to Bruce Bumgarner, one year;
did have direct line to action to
At that point, the elderly man
assistant,scoutmaster. ·
Danny Will aod recruiter stripe Tom Cassell, 'five years; Ralph .
come.
who had been reassuring his
The Second Class award was w Dwane McLaughlin.
ArQold, three years; Mitchell
young friend sat down on the
presented w Jim Rosenbaum,
Summer camp to he held at Chapman, three years; Chuck
THE OPENING session of curb and sobbed:
Danny Will and Paul Reed by Camp Arrowhead from July 2-8 Follrod , one year ; Allan
RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Tom Cassell; First Class was discussed.
the Section On Retirement
"Yes, but what about me?"
McLaughlin, four years;
Roles and Activities, had Dr.
Sen. Randolph found a Herbert Roush of Racine R.D. award was presented to Ed
Advancement made by lroflli Dwane McLaughlin, two
Margaret Clark, Professor of parable in this story which gave a party Tuesday evening Sission by Patrick Wood."
members thus far are seven years; Paul Reed, one year;
•.
Anthropology in Residence could he applied w the con- at their home, for those
A vocal selection was boys from Tenderfoot through Tom Reed, six years; Doug
University of California , San sensus on national needs and assisting at their open bouse,
presented by Joe Rosenbaum, Ufe, in five months five merit Rosenbaum, four years; Joe
;
Francisco , as the main priorities. Over a period of on their 25th wedding an- junior . assistant scoutmaster. badgetwel1'earned, during the Rosenbaum, five years; Billy
•
speaker.
years there have been a con- niversary Jan. 9at the Sh.riners
Paul Werner presented merit pastil months troop members Slack, three years; Ed Slasion,
In her opening remarks she siderable number of hearings, aub House In Racine.
badges to Tom Cassell, first- have participated in three two years; Harold Slssion, five
stated that to formulate the studies, consultations and
Games were played with
aid and cycling, and Ralph overnight camps, six days at years; Jeff Warner, two years;
national policy regarding rules investigations on our aging prizes going to Raymond
..
and activities of retired people population. Yet the stark Adams, Roger Rolllh, Nancy Arnold, reading, safety and summer camp, three one day Danny Will, two years; Paul
events' (hikes) as well as Warner, eight years, Richard
in our society is a topic statistical evidence that nearly RUSiell and Harriett Nelgler. personal fitness.
The
Star
Scout
award
was
several
patrol hikes.
Rosenbaum, four years; Tom
somewhat less basic than those five million of our elderly Mrs. Etta Mae Hill won the
•
presented to Ralph Arnold by
One of the overnight camps Cassell, 24 years, and Pat
of some of the other sections - citizens live below the povery tbor prile.
'
Richard
Rosenbaum.
was
In
November
when
17
boys
Wood,
five
years.
we would all agree that level is difficult to accept. The
G111!sts were Mrs. Florence
provision of income, health finding that the economic Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Dana
,,
care, and livable housing are problems of old age are Lewis of Clifton, Mr. and Mrs.
,.
required for the simple sur- growing - not decreasing - Ronald RUSiell of Middleport,
vival of older people . But, she and that a new class of Im- Mrs. Pearl Norrla, Mrs. Iva
concluded, that our topic was poverished citizens between Orr, Mrs. Guy Neigler,
in certain other ways even ages 60 and 64 has developed; Raymond Adama, Roger
more fundamental than these. these are matters of concern. Roush, Jeff Miner, Mrs. Bob
To find answers to questions
Last January ll,the Office of Hill, Mrs. Erma Wilson.
such as these: Does our society the White House Press
Refreshments of punch ;
BY JACK O'BRIAN
who never diadains the press. Probably because
coffee,
cake, Ice cream, sandneed ita older cctizens at all? Secretary
released · a
NEW
YORK
(KFS)
-There
are
Dollars
ill
biB dad's a top London Evening News aports.
Do they have a right to a place Statement by the ·President wiches, potato chips, and nuts
Decency
but
plainly,
bucks
In
bigotry:
"All
in
were
served.
writer ... Joan Rivers bad better check her
in our social order? What are confirming one of the actions
the Famlly" shorlly will publish ·''The Wil &amp; future ai!Brtment service: her new act Includes
'
Wi8dom of Archie Bunker" . and "The Edith whomps at her "doorman who makes obscene
Bunker Cookbook"; lllllllple recipe? First, phone calls on the house phone" and an elevator
slander two good egga? ... Old H'wood liberal operator ''who forgets biB route."
Dore Schary will confront dreary old British
The anti-Nixons war steps up: now
Fascist Party.founder Sir Oswald Mosley on Newsweek's trying to ignite palace
David Frost's hotseat; Sir Oswald will cop out; dissatlafacUon with ·an uncorroborated rumor
Dore will state Mosley's appearance Ia "against that Herb Klein, Nixon's longplay com.
munlcatlons chief, will leave the boss after the
election; does It actually suggest Nixon will lose
Fogarty to our cllnlc-llst: Ann's recovering (wanna bet?) or Ia it Klein-can't-llandle-TV in
the tap water that comes water is a safe drink and if .~are. Bottled water is fre- from surgery,
thiit video~g().()nly guesswork?
from their city water supply . you don't like the taste of quently not under the slrinFamed Dallas merchant king Stanley
Big scandal at J. F. Kennedy Airport:
There are stringent public )our local water it would be gent public. ~alth. ~ontrol (Nelman)Marcus lawrltinghlaautoblography;
'·
health regulations that con - useful in most instances. It that y~ur c1ty water IS .and no Howard Hughes-travail this time: Stanley doggie named "Brownie" has lived happUy in
'
trol the !actors that prevent is not without its dangers. for th.1s reason there 1s a ha.
the JFK baggage section at the International
fin off
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the development of excess Bottled water with certain greater danger that It might s four e ers.
Arrlvala Bldg. for two years; now a Port
bacteria in such water .
normal chemicals for the c o n t a 1n some harmful
We reported the other day June Lockhart Authority stuffed brasshat has ordered Brownie
·
telling us she's been livinl for two years with. banished. The lads who have taken care of the
As far . as the claim that body in it was found to be germs.
..
the minerals in the water associated with a lot of inMany people In the world her "Jeaua Christ Superstar" Utl!H"Oler boy homeless mutt are getting Irked; that's hardly
will ca us e atherosclerosis . fections c au sin g bacterial live free of disease, using friend; small squawk now from June - not
this is totally without founda- shock tven though this medi- contaminated water, by boll· about that; just we'd spelled biB name WI"Oiig ... shrewd employe-relations In any book. . ·
Rodney Dangerfield says be's just turned
tion. In fact. various epidem- cally prepared sterile water mg the water. If water Is It's "Bob Corff..
..
·
iology studies designed ,to was administered in the hos- boiled for a sufficient length.
. . · .
· . . down $20,000 a week at Las Vegas' InMultl·nullionhetress .Consuelo Vanderbilt ternational; says he'd rather stsy In his own 2nd
:·oot out factors that are as- pital environment. The phar- of time it kills almost all
sociated with atherosclerosis maceutical house producing germs that we know of that Earle just had sold off a virtual zoo of anlmala, Ave. club. Sure ... Here's how Victor Borge first
have persistently turned up the bottled water for intra· cause any significant prob· lirdJ and pets collected over years; her sister
the interesting observation venous administration dis- !ems to the body . Th1s may Muriel died the other dsy and named Consie got In trouble with the Naziabefore he fled here:
still living then in Denmark, be said on hla radio
that heart aqacks and heart covered · after a long search !&gt;" one reas~n why h~t tea Is executor _ of 48 horses and 38 parrots
that
the
bottle
caps
had
bedisease seem to be less fre10 the Ortent.
Another late-late arrival In the cllnlc~lst: ~: ptogram, "It's wrong to call the Nazla doga - ·
quent in locations where come contaminated in the so popular
INIWIPA"' '""m'SI &gt;~IN.)
Renee Black, widow of the Waldorf-Astoria's they lift their arms" ... Our gain.
there is hn rr/ wntrr a11(1 tots process. Nothing is 100 per
The youth-kultur insists 'half the U. S. Is
o( mi11em l ill tile water. The cent sat e.
famed top hotelier, is In Lenox Hill Hospital.
"under 25"; not so- our population now Is 208'
Unless the sp1·ing water.
diffe rence isn't much. bul it
Pf..H •••d ,.._
r •••stions ond John, Carson came back all refreshed after m!UIQII
hollled
or
nol,
or
well
water
,and half the country Ia .under 21 ...
com.,..IJ 10 · Llwrenco f. I.Dmb, f · ed
k off fr
.
certai nl y shoots down any
Wbllo a Jrc . wee
om biB prHmptiQII by the Probability - the median age will grow older:
idea Ihal the min•rals cat•sc or other source·; of water M.D., in core of this
atherosclerosis.
·
h a v e bren rarefully r~gu ­ Dr. Lomb conool •...., iiHir.ill..l OlympiCS on NBC-TV and plainly reaented the becaUBe of lirth control plua very deflnlte
' Ia ted by lh~ J' 1blic health 1r11or1, ,. .,;., •••••r ,.,.., t1 clean sport Invasion - then swiftly fielded a
,.,,,allY. hottl t•~ d i , l i fl~rt · d j!P tlr· ~, i1 i ~ l ~s~ liiH•Iy h1 he ftrtrrol inrertost in '"''"• col"'""~· filthy mouthful ...·Ollver Reed is a British star longevity of the &amp;Ked via geriatric dlacoverles,
elise--cutes etc.
·

.

Ranks Raised at

Court of Honor

Open House
Helpers
at Party

Voice along Br'Way
.

. . thdted Pnea lllltftllllenal
Afterwlnning18ofltafirst 111
games Virginia was upset
twice 1aat week, bowing to
Penn Stale and Duke and had
to lllrugste -Monday nlgbt to
beat Uenuion,IIUO, In the last
four llelpnds. of play.
Sco McCandlish
• . tt
dropped in
a pair of foul sltots with four
seconds left 19 give VIrginia the
victOry after the loth-ranked
Cavaliers lost a seven-point
,lead In !he second half.
' Jim Hobgood led Virginia
•
·
,with 1. points while Buddy
Odie was ' high man for
Clemson with 16. ·
rn other actton Involving
rated clubs, No. 1 ranked
UCLA remained unbeaten by
crushing Washington State,~
5~, Southwe,tern LoUisiana
(12) beat Northeast Louisiana,
IIU1, Kentucky · (15i..r)ppeq
Georgia, 87-63, and. Marshall
(16) defeated St. Francis
(Pa.), 95-80.
Keith . WUkes and Larry
Hollyfield scored 16 points each
and sophomore center Bill
Wsllon hit tklf-7 shots while
compiling .15 points and 19
rebounds as UCLA rolled over
Washington State. The topranked Bruins took a 9-0 lead
and never were in trouble,
hitting over 57 per cent of their

'

GREENVILLE, Tex .
(UP!)- Zlg-ug running back
Duane Thomas, the player who
rushed the most and said the
least for the Super Bowl
champion Dallas Cowboys,
pleaded guilty to having
marijuana Monday and
received a five-year probated
prison sentence.
Thom~s appeared In COurt
clean-shaven, wear Ing · a
conservative broWn suit. Hla
answers to Judge Hollis
Garmon ~ere stn'ctly "Yes,
"
sir, your honor."
Thomas' 21-year-old brother
entered the same plea and got
the ilame sentenCl!. Tbe two
br th
sled J 30

. Dear Dr. La~b - I ha ve
Just read a book m wh1ch the
author cla1ms that sprmg
water , well water, river or
Jake water or tap water is
unfit to drink because they
all contain inorganic minera is that form deposits in the
arteries, causing. atheroslerosi s which shortens life.
The author cia1m s that distilled water is the only water
which is fit to drink. May I
please have your opinion on
what kind of water is ·best
and safest to drink ? I am
concerned about whether or
not the bones might 'become
brittle from lack of calcium
il one were to drink only di stmed water.

GULLE1T SIGNS
CINCINJIIATI ( UPI) Doo Gullett, the Cioclnnall
Reds' top pltcber last year
with. a 18-8 record, has slped
his contract for this seasoo,
'the' club aonounced here
today.
Gullett, Zl, a left-bander,
posted a 2.84 earned run
average .and threw three
shutouts lltst year. Tbe Lyun,
Ky., oatlve II the 29th Cln·
ciunall player to sign for the
upcoming season: Eight
players are yet to sign.

L
'
ee

Bud Stallworth's 30 points
carried Kansas to a 71-59 rout
or Colorado and Kansas State
moved Into a tie roc the Big
Eight lead with. -Missouri by
crushing Oklahoma State, 7452. Reggie Ball and Charles
Dudley combined for U points
as Washington ~!eat Southern
California, 78-82, and BID
Ligon's 28 points carried
Vanderbilt to a 111-&amp;1 victory
over .Alabama,
Chris Ford scored 29 points
and Hank Slemiontkowskl had
· 19 points and 18 rebounds as
Villanova beat Bollton College,
n-10, while David Brent's 25
points lifted Jacksonville to an
8U9 rout of South Alabama.

Bowling GreeD Has
New 7-Foot Center
·

BOWLING GREEN, Ohio footer decides to attend a ·
(UPI)-8even-foot center school In the Mid-American
Mark Cartwright a University Conference.
of Marylal)d · sophomore who
"We're proud to get a player
dldri't think he bad much of a of Mark's abillty and we know
future at the school because of he can play a key role in puttbiB much-beralded sophomore ing Bowling Green on the map
·teammate Tom McMillen, will as a basketball power," Haley
play the rest of hla coUegiate said.
basketball at Bowling Green
Bowling Green, without a
State University.,
senior on the squad and suf.
qartwrlght, a . high school ferlng one of Its worst
All·American, dropped out at basketball seasons, is 3-17. ·
Maryland three weekS ago
Cartwright averaged 27.2
alter playing back-up to Mc- points and 17.2 reboUI!ds per
Millen and seeing limited game biB senior year at Niles
action.
West, m., High School and was
Bowling Green athletic offi- named All-American.
cials -announced late Monday
potential of a great future,
that Cartwright l"ould enroll
"DO you understand you bere for the spring term and
have w follow the law wtJether become eligible for the 1973-74
it's a good or bad law?" the sea9on, after sitting out next
judge asked Thomas.
·
season because of NCAA rules.
"Yes, sir, your honor," · Cartwright will be classified
Thomas said.
as a junior for the 1973-74 sea"Will you have the power to son and will have two years of By United Press lntern8lional
disassociate yourself from ellgltillty at Bowling Green.
Six Ohio college basketball
anybody who might have a bad
Since leaving Maryland,
Influence on you.,..
where he SC9red 110 points and games are on tap tonight,
Lo 1high-f
"
lighted
·
by
the
yo a o
"Yes sir, your honor.
bad ..
" rebounds in 15 games, Chicago contest with Ohio
Uni·
"There will probably be Cartwright has been heavily versity at Athens.
great temptations. You have to recruited by schools across the
The other contests include
be strong enough to resist and . country. He reportedly bad.
h 'dr
. Urbana at Kenyon, Anderson
not be associated wit
ugs or narrowed his choices to (Ind.) at Bluffton, Wilmington
11
anything like that. Do you te
Western Kentucky, Iowa State, at Cedarville, Findlay at Deme yo~\ have the strength to Utah and Bowling Green.
fisrweand Mercyhurst (Pa.) at
resist these temptations?"
Bowling Green apparently
.
"Yes, sir, your honor."
had an Inroad to Cartwright Walsh.
.
· ,Judge'\\ddniuei"~d :: ..\iecaujf' ill::a!@.~ot, '(!Ciq :. ~In the o~ly Monday night
· The ju~·e then addreJlled
hn H ft' .&lt;:.... •• 1• 1
.,h games, DaVIdson beat Dayton
, "" ,
· ' · · . • ·,Jo
e 8 .......,.... ance wt, · '· 854&gt;9 and SteubenviUe whipped
Bertrand,Thomas, the younger !he 18-yearold native of Morton California (Pa.) IOI.:tll.
brother·
Grove, D1.
Da 'dson 1 · tho ·
"I underst.,d you're going
Heft worked at Maryland's
. VI
• P aymg a
me m
to go to college. You have got to basketball camp last summer, ~~~~~-;·;::e~ aD~~~~
want to go straight and do where Cartwright was a stuH d Coach T
H Uand
1
right. All can~ Is give you dent~ructor.
ust!'ed to his w~s ~n the
the opportunity, he said.
Bowling Green Offlciala said
di froni bo 'tsl bed HDI·
Garmon then said be wanted academic considerations also ~dosufi ~ Bpi lnj · in
the court's records to show entered Into Cartwright's decie an eye ury a
''the parties have conducted si Official ~
!bed Cart- handball game and was or.
. .
on.
s \"escr
dered to rest In bed to allow a
themaelves m a gentleman.uke wright aa a serious student, blood lot to ~·-·I
manner ·"
. art · BowI'1ng
c forward
.._,Joeve.Sutter led
major Ing ID
Junior
Tbe Cowboys, who _have Green's school of art has a Da ldson with
20 lnt So hweathered· past controverstes good academic reputation.
~e guard 0o::O s~i.t. fed
with their explosive running
Heft was at Cartwright's su- Dayto with 25 lnts and John
back, bad no comment Qll the burban Chicago home Monday Bittern tided ~
sentence. A team spoke11111811 and notified athletic officialsa
·
said at present there were no here of Cartwright's decision.
''special plans" for Thomas. Cartwright visited the campus
SALE SET
In New York, a spokesman here last Thursday.
Evangeline Chapter, Order
for the National Foot~all
"We're tremendously of the Eastern Star, will have a
League said Commissioner . pleased that Mark bad decided soup sale Friday. Residents
Peter Rozelle would probably to attend Bowling Green," said wanting worder soup may do
not have anything to say until head Co8ch Pat Haley. "It's so until noon Thuraday by
he had studied the entire court not every day that a high telephoning 992-3335, 992-5178
proceeding.
school All-American apd a 7: or 99:&amp;-.'1748.

LoyoIa A1

a Sunday afternoon.
Travel Restricted
"You are not to leave Hunt
County or Dallas County
without pennlsslon of the
probation officer or without the
court's knowledge," Garmon .
said. "You will be under some
·~- t
ts1
cons....n superv on as you
travel about the country."
Garmon said be probllted the
sentence for the 24-year-old
football player because "you
are a young prson and ba.ve the

More Security With

FALSE TEETH
At AnyTime
Afraid fat.e teeth will drop at the
wrollJ time? A denture adhMive ean
help. FASTEETH0 Powder lfivu
dentureo a lonpr, ftrmer, oteadlor
hold. Why be emharn.d! For more
11euri_ty and comfort 1 un FAS_TEETH Dellturo Adheoive Powder.
Dontureo thai ftt are -•tial to
heoltb. See your dentltt I'Oiulariy.

IF YOU SAW SOMETHING IN
THIS NEWSPAPER THAT

you'd really like...

BALTIMORE (UP!) - That trade with the Philadelp)lia letting the game slip away.
axiom that athletes try harder 76ers, poured In 30 points Clark's jump Bhol put the
against teams that traded against his ex-teammates in a BuUets ahead, 102-101, but the
them away was proved once nationally televised contest, 76ers blew a chance to win the
again Monday by Archie Clark includihg the wiming hasket game when Fred .Foster
with. 21 seconds to play, as the missed a layup with five
of the Baltimore Bullets.
Bullets
scored a hard-earned seconds to play.
Clark, who came to the
Jack Marin and Wes Unseld
Bullets earlier this season in a 102-101 victory .
The triumph was an impor- slso played Important roles In
tant one for the Bullets and the the Bullets' victory as Marin
loss a costly one for the 76ers. scored 24 POints and Unseld
By winning, Baltimore boosted pulled down 19 rebounds.
Virginia at Denver
Dallas at Pittsburgh
its lead in the National
Foster and Bob Rule each got
(Only games scheduled)
21
points for tbe 78era.
Basketball
Association
's
College Basketball Results
By United Pres~ · International Central Division to four and
Both teams 1ri1l see action
Vincennes 19 Burlington 77
one-half games while the loss again tonight, with the Bullela
Marshall 95 St. Fran., Pa. 80
dropped Philadelphia closer to traveling to Buffalo and the
Ky. tOO Morehed St. 97, ot
Cheyney St. 85 Mlllersvl St. 61 playoff elimination in the 76ers going to Chicago. In other
New~ry 89 Claflin 87
Atlantic Division.
action, Phoenix Ia at Boston In
~All
Pfeiffer 89 Campbell 86
W0 dnes-y
Philadelphia
had
a
sevenan afternoon game, Portland at
ernoon
High Pr . 70 Appalachian 61
Leegue
Belmont
Ab.
73
Wash&amp;
Lee
71
point
lead,
7!1-72,
after
three
New York, Detroit at Los
Feb. 16 • 1972
Vanderbilt 111 Alabama 91
quarters and was leading, 101- Angeles and Seattle at Golden
Team
Stondints
Miss. St. 62 Auburn 60
100, with. 1:11 to go before State.
Baum's Lumber
~2 ~ Lafayetle 87 Gettysbg 78
'
Roanoke 79 Tulane 62
72 oiO Oicknsn
Team No. 4
95 Moravian 81
Gaul's Shake Haven
64 48 Villanova 92 Bos. Colt. 70
VVelker's
Ashland
53
59 Furman "" West Vir. 96
Team No. 1
5() 62
•r
HIGHLIGHTs---:
Ridenour's T.V.
27 85 51. Louis 76 No. Tex. St. 69
High Individual Game - S.W. La. 112 N.E. La. 91
·
with Paul Crabtr"e
Mildred Gaul 168.
Rider 91 Bucknell 84
Second High Ind. Game _ New Hamp. 88 Hawthorne 61
CALl POINTVIEW : 992·2505
Barbara Murray 161.
Austin Peay 68 East Tenn . St.
High Series - Flossie 45(). 67
c
30
Second Hlnh Series _ Eastern . Ky . 92 Mid . Tenn . 91
With the President's
Issue" on h. lOaf 10: p.m.
Barbara Murray 434.
Wayland 98 Bishop 93
globelrolling In the news,
looks Into how space
Team High Game _ Team East Texas 75 Sui Ross .64 .. . what better lime io bring out
technology has benefitted
No 4 304
·S.F. Auslln 89 McMurry 74
'dur favorn~· 'Gtllbetrl1tten ~
the consumer.
·
Team High_. Series _ Ba, um's .· Cor pus. c. hr.!•.ti. 104 -Texao_.. A&amp; I · •from ' 1!1an.m11nMeadowlerk ...
' "»' •, .... .J..+ •&gt;t •.. • ... -·
78
lemon and Co .. 1'/,h,o ,t\ave
MOVIES : "September • ·d·
1y
80
Lumber
·
'
Prairie View 124 Wylie 100
been delighting audiences
Storm," Joanne Dru, 4 p.m.,
Ark. St. 98 Trinity, Tex. 75
for more than a generation,
and "Battleground/' Van
Tri-County League
Centenary 87 Texas, Arl. 80
have a special at 8:30p.m.,
Johnson, 11 :30p.m., both Ch.
Standings
Jaxnvt 82 South Ala . 59
Chs. 2 &amp; 7. The guest list is
10.
Team
Pis.
Kansas
St.
74
Okla
.
St.
52
too
long
to
list,
but
suffice
if
+ ++
42 Kansas 71 Colorado 59
Larry's Ashland
to
say
that
with
Jean
(Edith
VVith
the
press of business,
34 Monmouth Colt. 96 Pratt 66
Davis Werner Ins.
Bunker) Stapleton as an
I've never caught the new
Pomeroy Cement Block
2286 Utah St. 100 Mont. St. 76
announcer, Robert Goulet as
daytime kids' show, "Watch
~~wesl\nongseOodge
N.W
.
La.
92
McNeese
St.
80
referee,
and
Pat
Boone
Your Child ·- The Mt Too
26
Angelo
St
84
Tarleton
78
among
!he
opposing
players,
:
Show"
yet. But Ed McMahon
Holsum Bakery
12 Air Force· 87 Col "'est St 59 .,, sounds l1"ke fun .
Is reading f avor If e otd
High IndiVIdual Ga me
·
"
·
·
R""is 89 Colorado Mines 76
Highly recommended.
children's
storlel
week.
George Wrtoh!
·•
7 (J sn 'tthis
II awf
• 238.
NewMex.
St. 81 Denver ·46
+++
1p.m., Ch ..
uII Y
Second High Ind. Game VVesfern N.M. 107 N.M Hilnds
We spent $24 billion and
early for Ed to be up?)
Bill Radford 213.
put a man on Ihe moon. VVhat
+++
88
High Series - Paul Harris Tex. Sou . 71 East. New Mex. 59 were the practical benefits
Pt . Pleasant at Hurricane
619
·
Prllnd St · 79 Gn~a 72
·and conse.auences for those
basketball ~ame on Cable
Second
High Seri es Carngle Mlln
7'1 eneva 75
of us left own here? "The
TV Ch. 5. ( lve Audio).
George Wright 599.
9
Team 1053.
High Game _ Davis .-~VV:I:Ik~es:_:10~1~L~y=co:m:i:ng~1~--~:::::::::::::::~~~~~
Warner
Team High Series
Firestone 3024.
Beginners League
•
Feb. 11, r972
Standings
Team
Pis.
Misfits
28
Red Devils
22
Four Aces
22
Four Deuces
18
Lucky Stars
16
Bombers
14
Hlah Individual Game - R.
Roach 226; J. White 184.
Second High Ind. Game - R.
Roach 201 ; J, White 174.
•,,
High Series - R. Roach 582;
J. White 528.
Second High Series - C.
Reed 479; 0. Hawley 435.
Team High Game
Red
Devils 785.
.
Team High Serll!s - ·Red
Devils 2099.
Veterans Memorial
Hospifol League
Feb. 15, 1972
Standings
Team
Pis.
Hit &amp;Misses
14
Gutter Bums
10
The Opens .
8
Straight Shooters
0
High Ind. Game
Becky
' Anderson 147.
Second High Ind . Game Sandy Sargent 1-16.
High Ind. Series - Becky
Anderson 399.
Second High Ind. Series Bessie Sylvester 391.
Team High Series - Hit &amp;
Misses 1306.
Team High Game· - The
Opens 494.

College Scores

Local Bowling

\.\\~\\TV

.......

•

And

City Loan financing is the answer! Buying an automobile direct
from the owner? Call City Loan for the money. Making a major
purchase from a dealer? It will pay you to ask him for thrifty City
Loari "Aclion-Pian Financing ."

When money is the question .. .".,...._.

you get·ln Pinta-

)

for aWlawer priCe.

The Daily Sentinel
OEVOTEO TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Exec . Ed .
ROBERT HOEFLICH .

is the a11$wer

VW Il L .. ..... .. $2119

One teat drive w\11 ahow you plenty : Pinto 's
American expressway power. Precise han·
dllng rack-and-pinion ateerlf'!Q. Wide t tance
for better atabltlly . And morel
•BIMd '" t to mptrlson ol tllchr prices lor bue 2·door
modtls. Optlorw l Whitt Sldtwtlla. A«:ent Grou p t nd Rnr

.

City Editor
Published 'd liiV eM c epl
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company , 111
Court St.. Pomeroy . Ohio ,
_.5169. 8uslnen Offict PhOne

PINTO .......... .. 11960
Pinto prknlower by •. $ 199
(Corolll

Flipper Wlrwtow (ell ahown), phis any dtaltr prep n d
dnllnetlon chart•• and
llltl art utra.

DATSUN 510 ....... $2121
PINTO ......... .. .. ~
Pinto prlttsiOWfr ~ •. S 161

TOYOTA 11101 ...... $2110
PINTO ......... ... .11960

VEGA.. ............ 12060

Plnloprlmlowerby . .$150

Pinto prltts klwtr by. .$ 100

r!NTO ............. $1960

992-2156. Edltorl•t P"one 992·
llSJ .
"
Second class posteQe paid at
Pomeroy , Oh io.
National adver ti sing

992-2171
.125 E. MAIN ST.

repre~entat l ve

1

;}

Bottin~lll ·

Gallagher , Inc ,, 12 East dnd
St ., Ntw York City , New York .
Subscr i ption· rates : De ·
liv~red by
carrier where
eveilable SO cents per week ;
By Motor Route where car rier
servlc:e not IV"Iilable : One
month $1 .75 . By man in Oh io
and w. Va ., One year nt .OO .
Six months S1.7S . Thru
months S.t .SO . Subscr iption
prlct includes Sundev Times .

POMEROY, 0.

Sfn. lnel .

~
I

Clark Hero In Bullets Victory

15
the Ford Team.

-r.

, "!'

ABA Standings
By United Press International
'
East
W. L. Pel. GB
Kentucky
51 12 .810 '"
Virginia
38 26 .594 13112
New York
29 35 .453 22'12
Floridians
26 38 .405 25 112
Carolina
25 39 .391 261!2
Pittsburgh
22 41 .349 29
VVest
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
44 20 .688 ...
Indiana
36 27 .571 7'12
Dallas
31 35 .470 14
Denver
25 37 .403 18
Memphis
23 40 .365 20112
Mondoy's Results
New York 104 Dallas 95
Utah 14'1 Pittsburgh 140
(Only games scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

&amp;JUTHERN'S RESERVE BASKETBALL squad ended Its season with. a 9-9 record. Front
row, 1-r, Bob Mlller, Mitch Nease, Vern Ord, Randy Warner, David Theiss, and Charles
KnighUng; back row, Coach Duane Wolfe, Randy Forbes, Dennis Hawk, Norman Curfman,
Wayne Ueland and Barry Theiss.

..

..

.

NBl' SI•I!Ciintl
By Unllod Prell lnlernollonol
Eosltrn Conltronce
Allontic Division
W. L Pet. GB
Boston
« 23 · .657
New York
oiO 24 .625 21h
Philadelphia 25 o10 .375 18
Buffalo
17 -16 .270 25
Centro I Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
28 35 .444 ...
Allanta
24 o10 .375 4V,
Cincinnati
20 « .313 8V2
Cleveland
19 47 .288 tov,
VVestern Conforence
Midwest Division
W, L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
52 15 .776 ...
Chicago
-16 20 .691 5'h
Phoenix
41 25 .621 101fl
De lroit
22 42 .3« 28'12
Pacific Division
.
W. L. Pel. GB
Los Angeles 54 9 .857 ...
Seattle
o10 25 .615 15
Golden Slate 39 25 .111/ 15112
Houston
25 39 .391 291/2
Portland
15 52 .224 41
Monday's Result
Balllmore 102 Phlla 101
IOnly game scheduled)
Tuesdey'a Gllme.Phoenix at !loston
Portland at New York
Detroit at Los ·Angeles
Seattle-Golden Stale
At Oakland
Baltimore at Buffalo
Philadelphia at ,Chicago

QU To.rug•ht.

~~sw!":J~ lhll~im .
'Ill~ ,..~"'=u-··· ··· ..
50 mUea norlhelist of ua as on

Minerals Safe in Drinking·Water.:::~m::;.~s.:;:::~~
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.

In contention.
ll
h d 23 ' t
d
Dwlgbt Lamar, the nation's
Russe
a
pom san
leading scorer, 1! 41 points as Tyrone Collins added 18 as
.SOuthwestern Loulalana rolled Marshall beat St. Francis.
00 Its 21st victory In 23 games , Mike D'Antoni hit five straight
by
beating
Northeast · baskets to brl!8k open the game
Loulstana. Roy Ebron added 36 in the second half.
points and took down 24
Elaewllere, Harry Robers
scored 'lT points to lead St.
rebounds for the Ragin' l.oiil.s to a 7a.. triumph over
Cajuns.
·
......
d J
Jlm Andrews scored 32 Nor:th •c:ras 8tate an
oe
points as Kentucky beat Sutter's 20 points carried.
Georgia to maintain a half. Davidson to an 85-$ victory
game lead In th~ Southeastern over Dayton. Ruas Hlint bad 'lT
Conference. Second-place points, Todd Brenizer hit 22
and Bud Bierly 20 to overcome
Tennessee,
w1th
Len a 45-polnt effort . by Wil
Kosmalski scoring 25 points,
. i:dged Florida, 511-42, to remain Robinson and lead Furman to a
9is6 overllme trtumpb over
18l8if( ,
d .ii[ ;;w West Virginia.
shots.

Thomas Pleads Guilty,
Placed On Probation

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
They Won't Cause Atherosclerosis

DAY POSTPONED
. There Will not be a free
clothing day lhla month at 'J'tJe
Salvation Army, Butternut
Reader- My response
Ave., Pomeroy. A new da~ for to Dear
the. boo k you read IS
the obeervance will be an- ''Rubb1sh !" The safest water nounced later,
for most people lo dri nk is
I

Conference on
g
Points to Action ·Year

.,

'•

,•

KEITH GOBLE FORD, INC.
461 South Third St.

I''

•

Middleport

�.

•
,.

t - The Delly Sehtinei,Milldleport-Pcmeroy,
0., Feb.
.
. 22, 19'12

.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Homebuilder Class Visits

False Card Detected
~~~h~efitr;me~~~~:~~~
led a diamond to his ace and
NORTH (D) .
;.A4
.A63
.K/(52
.AK2

Improve Patients' Spirit
second

ATHENS - On the
Tuesday of each month
geriatric patients afthe Athens
Mental Health Center look
· forward to a visit by the
Hoolebuilder Class volunleer
group of the Mld.Ueport Church
of Chrisl

.

Their visits started four
years ago after Osby Martin,
an employee of the Center at
the time, expressed to his wife
Mary the ·need for more In·
dividual affec:Uon with the
patients. The Martins were
able to Involve their church
and soon 10 to 16 people
became regular visitors to the
Center under the direcUon of
Dorothy Yeauger and Nora
Rice. Volunteers are not
restricted to church group
members and often come from
all areas of the Middleport
community.
With each visit the Mid·

EAST
dleport group ll:lngs gills and ployee who Ia respo~~~~lble for WEST
•
KQII05
.873
refreshments for the patients. coordinating activities on the ¥7 5
.QJ1094
During their two to three hour geriatrics unit, finds the · .1063
.Q4
stay, they play bingo with the patients much more ·responsive .Q97
.J54
SOUTH
patients or have a guitar and now. "They reaDy look forward
.962
piano sing along, On Chrlslmas to vi.!lts from the volunleers
.K82
they have a biB party where and participate a great deal
.A98
their own Santa Claus bands more In the activities now. You
• 10863
almost have to come and see
out special gifts.
Both vulnerable
Both center employees for yourself the good they are West North Ebt South
working with geriatrics and the doing."
1•
Pass 1 N.T.
Members of the Middleport Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
regular volunteer group
members have noticed a group that have been regular P...
Opening lead- · K
change In the patients since attenders are Lawrence
their first visit four years ago. Stewart, Homebuilder Claas
According to Mary Martin of President; Beatrice stewart, By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
the volunleer group, "Years Raullln Moyer, Dorothy
George Washington could
ago, all the patients didn't have Roach, Osby and Mary Martin, not ten a lie and accordingly
the same personal items, since Herman and Margaret kin- would never have been
S!!IJle had more money than caid, Flo and William Grueser, caught in the trap that ex·
others. It has changed greatly Denver and ·Nora Rice, Nor- 'pert West fell into.
West was looking right at
since .then, but I still find great man and Dorothy Yeauger, thOse five diamonds in dum·
joy In giving patients the little Charles and Margret Neuman, my. He hoped ihat his part·
things most other people aren't and Dick and Thelma Wiley. ner held three diamonds to
The Middleport volunteer the queen but if he only held
even concerned about."
Carl Wright, a center em- group Is only one of four queen·smallln that key suit
regular volunleer groupe that West wanted to try .to pro·
unselfishly devote their time teet that queen.
The early play started with
and efforts to patients at the
Athens Mental Health Center.

MarsluJll Remains 16th
In UPI College Ratings
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio
State, ninth a week ago In the
United Press International
major college basketball
ratings, fell to Hth today.
Toledo appeared on the list in
a tie for 19th with Providence.
Continuing to lead the poll
was UCLA, with Marquette
second and North Carolina
third.
Marshall University, despite
three wins· th.e past week,
remained 16th in this week's
poll._

played back the nine·. Expert

Jackson Inks '72 Contract;

Richie Allen R.ol.ding Out
av

·we,t was ready with a stan- -•
dard false card. He played
the three of diamonds on the
first lead and dropped the
ten next. He wanted South .
to believe that he had started
will! queen· ten · three, In
which case the finesse would
be the sure fire winning play.
So Wes t pIayed the ten and
South called for dummy's
king. East's queen dropped
and South galloped away
with four no-trump for a top
score.
·
"Quite a play," said West
patronizingly. "Do you al·
S.OIII $1 lot JACOBY MODERN book
(o: 11Win at Bridge," (c/o tltis MWs·

pa,.,J, ,.o. ••• m, R""i• c;ry
Station, foi.. York, H. Y. 10019.

ways play queen over the
jack."

" Not at all," replied South.
"I know tbe correct mathe·
matical play was a finesse,
?ut you look like the sort of
man who wotild go out of his
way to false card."
(NEWSPAPI:R ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

u-..-~ ........ IDte
w .... " ' ... ·

na

llouJ contract Monday, making tbls

Reggie Jackson proved no

problem but Richie Allen
remains an enigma.
Jackson, the slugging outIielder of the Oakland
Athletics, si•ned his 1972
~

Adelphi 92 Queens Coil. 75
Virginia 62 'Ciemson 60
MurraySt.68Tenn . Tech66

~!f~~;,\~5 ~~~:

"Union 110 Hamilton 79
Marlst 88 Brooklyn 63

The bidding has IJeen:
West North
East

1•

Dble
2¥
3¥

'·

South
Pass
2t

2.

Pass
Pas:5
Pass
Pass
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
.98654¥AQ6 +A32.J4
What do you do now ?
A-Bid four h e a r t s. Your
partner has a real heart suit.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to five
clubs. What do you do now ?

the earliest he has agreed to
terms in three years. The 25year-old outfielder had his best
aU-round season In the majors
la.st year with 32 homers, 80
runs battled In, a :m batting
average and 15 assists. .
Jackson is the 29th Oakland
player to sign for the new
season, but still among the
unsigned are pitchers Vida
Blue, Diego Segul, j:tollie
Fingers and Darold Knowles,
third baseman Sal Bando,

.

said 'Okay, you've 1101 it.' But
then he backed IWIIy," uld
·Holcomb. The figure waa
believed to be $lii,OOO•
'
Manager Oluck Tanner. next
visited with Allen it 1111 bame
In Wampum, Pa.,lall week but
.couldn't talk the controftl'llal
star IntO -'-•-. AUI!n Is ·
-~"'playert wbo
among 11 roster

24-07 Jackson Ave.
Pleasant

/?!?'!:fA

have· not . signed their contracts.
The Dodgers, who Sunday
signed shortstop Maury Wllls
and newly acquired outfielder
outflelderJoeRudi,~daecond Frank RolUlaon, nicelvecfthe
baseman Dick Green.
signed contracts of Bill BuckAllen, meanwhile, was ner and BillY Grabarkewllz.
among the missing at The Dodgers still have 12
sarasota, Fla., when• the unsigned players, Including
Chicago White Sox opened starting pitchers Don Sutton,
their camp. Allen, traded to AI Downing and Bill Singer.
Olicago from the Los Angeles
The Montreal
Expc.s
Dodgers this . winter, has received the si8ned contract of ·
proved puzzling In his pinchhltter specialist Jim
negotiations with General Fairey and now haye just six
Manager Stu Holcomb. unsigned players. Those six
Holcomb contacted Allen by Include outfielder Rusty staub,
]Xlone 10 days ago and a$ked second baseman Ron Hunt,
the slugging star to name his outfielder ~elth Lampard an~
own salary figure.
pitchers Mike Marshall and
"He named a figure and .I Carl Morton.

PRICES 'IN EFFECT
.NOW
TILL QUANTITIES
·LASTI

Main Street
Mason

We Pledge--If we
advertise an itemWe tiave it in our store.

· - 1ST. QUALITY SIZES 6~ TO 10%

HOlE
For llle ·smaller girl who
between 65 to 100 lbs.
· Spring Shades.

Stock up your boys n~w
for school or dress. Blazer
Stripe Pattern. .

¢

GLASSWARE RIOT

12\

MATCHED
- -·
UNIFORM

KET REMNANT

SETS

RIOT

Mlll&lt;&gt;verruns, full size, twin
size·, remnant pieces in needle
woven fabrics. Come see-great

'"fi

Coverless!

Full Size!

Size lX TO 4X

MUGS
OR
CUPS

PAPER
·BACK
BOOKS

CANNON
BATH
TOWELS

X LARGE
PANTY
HOSE

Factory Rejects

Values to 75c

No. 1 Seconds

Fits up to 200 lbs

On Sale Tuesday 4 p.m.

King Kole Brand. 50 percent
polyester, 50 percent cotton,
811, 02. Sturdy Twlll. 3 colors.

for

White Dinnerware

Don't Miss These!

.

,

Non Skid
Foam Backs .
Many Beautiful Patterns
in Several Colors

Ashtrays, juice glasses, tumblers,
cocktail glasses, on the rocks
glasses, cola glass, soda glass,
punch cups, salt and peppers,
desert dishes and other ltems.ems.

PR.

Permanent Press to Retain Freshness!

Points
330

Vinyl Plastic Place Mats

American Made! Why Pay More?

WE1E THE lmLE ' STOlE
WITH
.
IEnEI EVERYDAY PRICES THAN THE BIG GUYSI

week)

.GPiN TONIGHT ANI EVElY NIGHT UNTil 9 P~l.

Values to 2Sc

Pr.

(Twelfth

Marquette {22-0)
274
North Carolina (18·3) 216
Penn {18-2)
199
Louisville (19-2)
198
Long B•ach St. (21·3) 111
(Tie) Scuth Car. {17-4} 101
!Tie) Brigham Young (18.3)
101
9. Missouri (19-31
44
10. Virginia (18·31
35
11 . Maryland (17.3)
32
12. S.W. Louisiana (20-2)
27
13. Florida Stale !2H)
26
14. Ohio Stale (15·5)
24
22
1s. Kentuckr !17·41
16. Marshal (21 ·2)
19
17. Houston {17-5)
18
18. Hawaii (22·2)
17
19.
(Tie}
Provdnce
(16·31
11
Holzer. Medical Center, First
!Tiel Toledo {16-4)
11
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Maternity vlsiUng hirurs 2:30 to
BASKETBALL
~:30 p.m. Parents only on
TOURNAMENT
SCORES
Pediatrics Ward.
Uolted Preaa1Dteraatl01181
Births
(Steabeavllle Claas ASect.)
Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Conotton Valley 61 Tiltonsville
Rice, Pt. Pleasant, a daughter; " 55 .
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon W. Adelll! 62 Smithfield 39
70 Carrollton St.
Goody, Gallipolis, a son; Mr. Jewett..sclo
Edward 60
and Mrs . Paul E. Claar
Weilston, a daughter and Mr:
and Mrs. Don P. Smith,
NEW COACH
Racine, a son.
MINNEAPOLIS ( UPI )Dl14!harges
Herb Brookll, an assistant
Hilda 0. Sturgeon, Benny R. coach at the University of
Deweese, Mrs. Kenneth D. Mlnqesota, was appoiDted
Jordan and son, Mrs. Gerald D. Monday as head hockey coach
Wisecup and daughter, Tiffany of the Gophers.
M. Detty, Mrs. Dorothy Beird,
Brooka, wbo signed a three
Ronald J. Cline, Charles R. year contract, will succeed
Creel, Vicki L. Gettles, Interim Coach Ken Yackel next
Eleanor J. Hariman, Joseph H. year. Yackel filled in after
Halley, Mrs. Guy W. Harper Glen Sonmor left last
and son, Pauline M. Holliday, Ilecember to head the MinArnold H. Lawless, Fay L. nesota Fighting Saints of the
Lewis, Flora J. Wess, Tia M. new
World
Hockey
Orebaugh, Rebecca Rothgeb, Association.
Alfred L. Roush, Darrell M.
Shaffer, Malinda M. Simms,
!rona M. Skaggs, Charles A.
Kings Pt. 88 Yeshiva 66
Smith, Cinda L. Sou!Sby, Rhett Tennessee
55 Florida 52
C. Stidham , Sula M. Fry, Hilda Kentucky 87 Georgia 63
M. While, Kathy L, McGuire. Western Ill. 92 Ball St. 76
Maudellen R. Henry, Harley Sleubenvl 101 Cal . Pa. 81
Crump, Roher! R. Hendrick,
Mary M. Brookins, Cora E.
Denny, Mrs. Shirley Jones,
Mollie B. Parish, William H.
Miller, Roy H. Chamberlain,
Mrs. William E. Blackburn and
daughter, Bernice Frazee,
Fannie Pearce, Paul D. BeD,
John J. Blair, Mrs. Ora Brown,
Howard 0. Brumfield, James
L. Bush, II , Maxine C. Hoff.
man , Dora C. Huber, Mrs.
Beatrice Lisle, Mrs. Lula L.
Mayes, Wilma J. Pauley, Caryl
E. Pooler, Tammy S. Rossiter,
Peggy A. Saunders, Iva
Stewart, Mrs. Okey A. Tawney
and son, Gertrude M. Taylor,
Harley E. Taylor, John C.
Davis.
Retha J. Shuler, Edward J.
Viers, Sr., Henry Camlnk,
Trula J. Hackler, Norma
Hodge, Mrs. Bobby J. Ousley &amp;
daughter, Mrs. Carl McCoy &amp;
daughter, Mrs . Harriett
Blanton, Homer Brown, Brian
Click, Harley Cline, Edwin
Edelblute, Ancll L. Kelly,
Spencer D. ·Moss, Mrs. Dale
Riffle, Hazel I. Sheela, Mrs.
Charles l:l. Wether holt and
daughter,Jimmy L. Workman,
Jr. .

t

PANTY

teams wit h flrsf place votes

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

700 2nd Ave .

JR. Mill

and won -lost records as of Feb.
Team
I. UCLA !331 (20·01

I
l

Stieer Seamless

N~W
YORK . (UPII- The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball

20 in parentheses:

A 015(0\INT
DOARTMtNT STORE

¢.

¢

44fa

Ea.

h

I

$ 47
Pr.

Ea.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Sympathy Flowets

With Magnetic Pick Up Treatment!
'

with sa.oo worth of ~soline

••

$}99

Removable Head for Easy Washing

DUST

At Hard to Believe
Low Prices-

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE!

MOP
So::e~:~::on .$167

L .f.l l

f'.~J' ~ .~ &lt;1

··d·TCHEN
WALL
CLOCK·S

Scratching .

eo:J344

Made in U.S.A.
Regular 1.59 Liberty

USEHOLD

BROOM
¢

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT
TILL
9 p.m.!

All
Corn!

size 21 x JO,
CHENILLE MUL TICOLOR

THROW
RUGS
1rr's. of 59c value

\

·~'-'tlER OAVS ARE HERE AG41N.

'

'I

l

Hs also afree party plate, hee salad·plate and free saucer.
Our plates are beautiful any way you use them . The Wexford pat·
tern looks like delicate hand-cut · crystal and matches the cups
we 've been giving away.
They're p~rfect for everyday use and all type~ of entertaining .
Sta~ collecting a set of plates now at participating Ashland statio/ils .
You II also want to get our matching serving tray.

Baskets
' I Sprays
tllases

GOESSUR'S

I
I!

. ''
I

l·1

-Ashland.

I Blankets

l
I!

~"I
s

1·

Doo't Ml" "''" · Vol"" to 79 '

Jumbo Size Toiletries

oo • Cocoanut Oil Shampoo .
.c:astile Soap ShamP
Hair Tonic . Hand Cream
.
eCreme Hair Rinse. Cr~me
•Shampoo N'Egg
eAtmond Lotion
eAfter Shave
eBiue Petals Lotion

1'

I

~Cold

Cream
·and others

JEWELRY STORE

Extra Special
OU~

•we' will tdjust to this )~!'!!~~~,.!!
Cuanntee is

"'Solo" Styr~:ne Plastic

DRAPES
Fully
Lined

.. ,
'

.

. \

,,1}
.

BOYS SOFT

OR LON
DREIS
SOCKS
·
.

BATH ROOM
CUP
DISPENSER
Complete with 25 cups

REGULAR 57c

PRINTED
PlASTIC

The modern ,
sanitary way to
drinking cups
your Iamlly .
1for bath, I for
lkitcl•en.

¢'

Save

PR.
American Made ~'Bata" Quality
Womens &amp; Teens Low Cut

Cherry, Yellow or
Avocado Colors

tVhlte-$
4)1

PR.

EA..

1"0 INCH COLORED

Oxfords
Sf'ZE

'

Save 20c. Fits size 9 to
ll . Many Colors .
Irregulars.

"DuPonts" Teflon II Regular 2.98

Canvas
Navylllark·

Court St., Pomoror

- ·---- ~

~

~~:
$194
PRICE!
·

TO 10

No Scouring.
No Scraping•

i

Sa.ve Cash!
l. ;,l~-.1-.~

1 ...

The look Is new-New Colors, New heel
heights and designs. Select yours from straps,
slipons or ties. Our selection has a shoe for
every age for dress or casual wearing.

t

S.rvlng :
Golllpolh
Poi!Mroy, MldcliftJort,
ond
W. Yo.

ALARM

CLOCK.",,

14".serving tray. Only $1.39 with purchase.

Dudley's flol ist

·SPRING
SHOES

Dependable "Lux" Brand . 40 hour

FRY PAN

.$ 99

�.

•
,.

t - The Delly Sehtinei,Milldleport-Pcmeroy,
0., Feb.
.
. 22, 19'12

.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Homebuilder Class Visits

False Card Detected
~~~h~efitr;me~~~~:~~~
led a diamond to his ace and
NORTH (D) .
;.A4
.A63
.K/(52
.AK2

Improve Patients' Spirit
second

ATHENS - On the
Tuesday of each month
geriatric patients afthe Athens
Mental Health Center look
· forward to a visit by the
Hoolebuilder Class volunleer
group of the Mld.Ueport Church
of Chrisl

.

Their visits started four
years ago after Osby Martin,
an employee of the Center at
the time, expressed to his wife
Mary the ·need for more In·
dividual affec:Uon with the
patients. The Martins were
able to Involve their church
and soon 10 to 16 people
became regular visitors to the
Center under the direcUon of
Dorothy Yeauger and Nora
Rice. Volunteers are not
restricted to church group
members and often come from
all areas of the Middleport
community.
With each visit the Mid·

EAST
dleport group ll:lngs gills and ployee who Ia respo~~~~lble for WEST
•
KQII05
.873
refreshments for the patients. coordinating activities on the ¥7 5
.QJ1094
During their two to three hour geriatrics unit, finds the · .1063
.Q4
stay, they play bingo with the patients much more ·responsive .Q97
.J54
SOUTH
patients or have a guitar and now. "They reaDy look forward
.962
piano sing along, On Chrlslmas to vi.!lts from the volunleers
.K82
they have a biB party where and participate a great deal
.A98
their own Santa Claus bands more In the activities now. You
• 10863
almost have to come and see
out special gifts.
Both vulnerable
Both center employees for yourself the good they are West North Ebt South
working with geriatrics and the doing."
1•
Pass 1 N.T.
Members of the Middleport Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
regular volunteer group
members have noticed a group that have been regular P...
Opening lead- · K
change In the patients since attenders are Lawrence
their first visit four years ago. Stewart, Homebuilder Claas
According to Mary Martin of President; Beatrice stewart, By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
the volunleer group, "Years Raullln Moyer, Dorothy
George Washington could
ago, all the patients didn't have Roach, Osby and Mary Martin, not ten a lie and accordingly
the same personal items, since Herman and Margaret kin- would never have been
S!!IJle had more money than caid, Flo and William Grueser, caught in the trap that ex·
others. It has changed greatly Denver and ·Nora Rice, Nor- 'pert West fell into.
West was looking right at
since .then, but I still find great man and Dorothy Yeauger, thOse five diamonds in dum·
joy In giving patients the little Charles and Margret Neuman, my. He hoped ihat his part·
things most other people aren't and Dick and Thelma Wiley. ner held three diamonds to
The Middleport volunteer the queen but if he only held
even concerned about."
Carl Wright, a center em- group Is only one of four queen·smallln that key suit
regular volunleer groupe that West wanted to try .to pro·
unselfishly devote their time teet that queen.
The early play started with
and efforts to patients at the
Athens Mental Health Center.

MarsluJll Remains 16th
In UPI College Ratings
NEW YORK (UP!) - Ohio
State, ninth a week ago In the
United Press International
major college basketball
ratings, fell to Hth today.
Toledo appeared on the list in
a tie for 19th with Providence.
Continuing to lead the poll
was UCLA, with Marquette
second and North Carolina
third.
Marshall University, despite
three wins· th.e past week,
remained 16th in this week's
poll._

played back the nine·. Expert

Jackson Inks '72 Contract;

Richie Allen R.ol.ding Out
av

·we,t was ready with a stan- -•
dard false card. He played
the three of diamonds on the
first lead and dropped the
ten next. He wanted South .
to believe that he had started
will! queen· ten · three, In
which case the finesse would
be the sure fire winning play.
So Wes t pIayed the ten and
South called for dummy's
king. East's queen dropped
and South galloped away
with four no-trump for a top
score.
·
"Quite a play," said West
patronizingly. "Do you al·
S.OIII $1 lot JACOBY MODERN book
(o: 11Win at Bridge," (c/o tltis MWs·

pa,.,J, ,.o. ••• m, R""i• c;ry
Station, foi.. York, H. Y. 10019.

ways play queen over the
jack."

" Not at all," replied South.
"I know tbe correct mathe·
matical play was a finesse,
?ut you look like the sort of
man who wotild go out of his
way to false card."
(NEWSPAPI:R ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

u-..-~ ........ IDte
w .... " ' ... ·

na

llouJ contract Monday, making tbls

Reggie Jackson proved no

problem but Richie Allen
remains an enigma.
Jackson, the slugging outIielder of the Oakland
Athletics, si•ned his 1972
~

Adelphi 92 Queens Coil. 75
Virginia 62 'Ciemson 60
MurraySt.68Tenn . Tech66

~!f~~;,\~5 ~~~:

"Union 110 Hamilton 79
Marlst 88 Brooklyn 63

The bidding has IJeen:
West North
East

1•

Dble
2¥
3¥

'·

South
Pass
2t

2.

Pass
Pas:5
Pass
Pass
Pass
?
You, South, hold:
.98654¥AQ6 +A32.J4
What do you do now ?
A-Bid four h e a r t s. Your
partner has a real heart suit.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner continues to five
clubs. What do you do now ?

the earliest he has agreed to
terms in three years. The 25year-old outfielder had his best
aU-round season In the majors
la.st year with 32 homers, 80
runs battled In, a :m batting
average and 15 assists. .
Jackson is the 29th Oakland
player to sign for the new
season, but still among the
unsigned are pitchers Vida
Blue, Diego Segul, j:tollie
Fingers and Darold Knowles,
third baseman Sal Bando,

.

said 'Okay, you've 1101 it.' But
then he backed IWIIy," uld
·Holcomb. The figure waa
believed to be $lii,OOO•
'
Manager Oluck Tanner. next
visited with Allen it 1111 bame
In Wampum, Pa.,lall week but
.couldn't talk the controftl'llal
star IntO -'-•-. AUI!n Is ·
-~"'playert wbo
among 11 roster

24-07 Jackson Ave.
Pleasant

/?!?'!:fA

have· not . signed their contracts.
The Dodgers, who Sunday
signed shortstop Maury Wllls
and newly acquired outfielder
outflelderJoeRudi,~daecond Frank RolUlaon, nicelvecfthe
baseman Dick Green.
signed contracts of Bill BuckAllen, meanwhile, was ner and BillY Grabarkewllz.
among the missing at The Dodgers still have 12
sarasota, Fla., when• the unsigned players, Including
Chicago White Sox opened starting pitchers Don Sutton,
their camp. Allen, traded to AI Downing and Bill Singer.
Olicago from the Los Angeles
The Montreal
Expc.s
Dodgers this . winter, has received the si8ned contract of ·
proved puzzling In his pinchhltter specialist Jim
negotiations with General Fairey and now haye just six
Manager Stu Holcomb. unsigned players. Those six
Holcomb contacted Allen by Include outfielder Rusty staub,
]Xlone 10 days ago and a$ked second baseman Ron Hunt,
the slugging star to name his outfielder ~elth Lampard an~
own salary figure.
pitchers Mike Marshall and
"He named a figure and .I Carl Morton.

PRICES 'IN EFFECT
.NOW
TILL QUANTITIES
·LASTI

Main Street
Mason

We Pledge--If we
advertise an itemWe tiave it in our store.

· - 1ST. QUALITY SIZES 6~ TO 10%

HOlE
For llle ·smaller girl who
between 65 to 100 lbs.
· Spring Shades.

Stock up your boys n~w
for school or dress. Blazer
Stripe Pattern. .

¢

GLASSWARE RIOT

12\

MATCHED
- -·
UNIFORM

KET REMNANT

SETS

RIOT

Mlll&lt;&gt;verruns, full size, twin
size·, remnant pieces in needle
woven fabrics. Come see-great

'"fi

Coverless!

Full Size!

Size lX TO 4X

MUGS
OR
CUPS

PAPER
·BACK
BOOKS

CANNON
BATH
TOWELS

X LARGE
PANTY
HOSE

Factory Rejects

Values to 75c

No. 1 Seconds

Fits up to 200 lbs

On Sale Tuesday 4 p.m.

King Kole Brand. 50 percent
polyester, 50 percent cotton,
811, 02. Sturdy Twlll. 3 colors.

for

White Dinnerware

Don't Miss These!

.

,

Non Skid
Foam Backs .
Many Beautiful Patterns
in Several Colors

Ashtrays, juice glasses, tumblers,
cocktail glasses, on the rocks
glasses, cola glass, soda glass,
punch cups, salt and peppers,
desert dishes and other ltems.ems.

PR.

Permanent Press to Retain Freshness!

Points
330

Vinyl Plastic Place Mats

American Made! Why Pay More?

WE1E THE lmLE ' STOlE
WITH
.
IEnEI EVERYDAY PRICES THAN THE BIG GUYSI

week)

.GPiN TONIGHT ANI EVElY NIGHT UNTil 9 P~l.

Values to 2Sc

Pr.

(Twelfth

Marquette {22-0)
274
North Carolina (18·3) 216
Penn {18-2)
199
Louisville (19-2)
198
Long B•ach St. (21·3) 111
(Tie) Scuth Car. {17-4} 101
!Tie) Brigham Young (18.3)
101
9. Missouri (19-31
44
10. Virginia (18·31
35
11 . Maryland (17.3)
32
12. S.W. Louisiana (20-2)
27
13. Florida Stale !2H)
26
14. Ohio Stale (15·5)
24
22
1s. Kentuckr !17·41
16. Marshal (21 ·2)
19
17. Houston {17-5)
18
18. Hawaii (22·2)
17
19.
(Tie}
Provdnce
(16·31
11
Holzer. Medical Center, First
!Tiel Toledo {16-4)
11
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Maternity vlsiUng hirurs 2:30 to
BASKETBALL
~:30 p.m. Parents only on
TOURNAMENT
SCORES
Pediatrics Ward.
Uolted Preaa1Dteraatl01181
Births
(Steabeavllle Claas ASect.)
Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Conotton Valley 61 Tiltonsville
Rice, Pt. Pleasant, a daughter; " 55 .
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon W. Adelll! 62 Smithfield 39
70 Carrollton St.
Goody, Gallipolis, a son; Mr. Jewett..sclo
Edward 60
and Mrs . Paul E. Claar
Weilston, a daughter and Mr:
and Mrs. Don P. Smith,
NEW COACH
Racine, a son.
MINNEAPOLIS ( UPI )Dl14!harges
Herb Brookll, an assistant
Hilda 0. Sturgeon, Benny R. coach at the University of
Deweese, Mrs. Kenneth D. Mlnqesota, was appoiDted
Jordan and son, Mrs. Gerald D. Monday as head hockey coach
Wisecup and daughter, Tiffany of the Gophers.
M. Detty, Mrs. Dorothy Beird,
Brooka, wbo signed a three
Ronald J. Cline, Charles R. year contract, will succeed
Creel, Vicki L. Gettles, Interim Coach Ken Yackel next
Eleanor J. Hariman, Joseph H. year. Yackel filled in after
Halley, Mrs. Guy W. Harper Glen Sonmor left last
and son, Pauline M. Holliday, Ilecember to head the MinArnold H. Lawless, Fay L. nesota Fighting Saints of the
Lewis, Flora J. Wess, Tia M. new
World
Hockey
Orebaugh, Rebecca Rothgeb, Association.
Alfred L. Roush, Darrell M.
Shaffer, Malinda M. Simms,
!rona M. Skaggs, Charles A.
Kings Pt. 88 Yeshiva 66
Smith, Cinda L. Sou!Sby, Rhett Tennessee
55 Florida 52
C. Stidham , Sula M. Fry, Hilda Kentucky 87 Georgia 63
M. While, Kathy L, McGuire. Western Ill. 92 Ball St. 76
Maudellen R. Henry, Harley Sleubenvl 101 Cal . Pa. 81
Crump, Roher! R. Hendrick,
Mary M. Brookins, Cora E.
Denny, Mrs. Shirley Jones,
Mollie B. Parish, William H.
Miller, Roy H. Chamberlain,
Mrs. William E. Blackburn and
daughter, Bernice Frazee,
Fannie Pearce, Paul D. BeD,
John J. Blair, Mrs. Ora Brown,
Howard 0. Brumfield, James
L. Bush, II , Maxine C. Hoff.
man , Dora C. Huber, Mrs.
Beatrice Lisle, Mrs. Lula L.
Mayes, Wilma J. Pauley, Caryl
E. Pooler, Tammy S. Rossiter,
Peggy A. Saunders, Iva
Stewart, Mrs. Okey A. Tawney
and son, Gertrude M. Taylor,
Harley E. Taylor, John C.
Davis.
Retha J. Shuler, Edward J.
Viers, Sr., Henry Camlnk,
Trula J. Hackler, Norma
Hodge, Mrs. Bobby J. Ousley &amp;
daughter, Mrs. Carl McCoy &amp;
daughter, Mrs . Harriett
Blanton, Homer Brown, Brian
Click, Harley Cline, Edwin
Edelblute, Ancll L. Kelly,
Spencer D. ·Moss, Mrs. Dale
Riffle, Hazel I. Sheela, Mrs.
Charles l:l. Wether holt and
daughter,Jimmy L. Workman,
Jr. .

t

PANTY

teams wit h flrsf place votes

2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

700 2nd Ave .

JR. Mill

and won -lost records as of Feb.
Team
I. UCLA !331 (20·01

I
l

Stieer Seamless

N~W
YORK . (UPII- The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball

20 in parentheses:

A 015(0\INT
DOARTMtNT STORE

¢.

¢

44fa

Ea.

h

I

$ 47
Pr.

Ea.

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Sympathy Flowets

With Magnetic Pick Up Treatment!
'

with sa.oo worth of ~soline

••

$}99

Removable Head for Easy Washing

DUST

At Hard to Believe
Low Prices-

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE!

MOP
So::e~:~::on .$167

L .f.l l

f'.~J' ~ .~ &lt;1

··d·TCHEN
WALL
CLOCK·S

Scratching .

eo:J344

Made in U.S.A.
Regular 1.59 Liberty

USEHOLD

BROOM
¢

OPEN EVERY
NIGHT
TILL
9 p.m.!

All
Corn!

size 21 x JO,
CHENILLE MUL TICOLOR

THROW
RUGS
1rr's. of 59c value

\

·~'-'tlER OAVS ARE HERE AG41N.

'

'I

l

Hs also afree party plate, hee salad·plate and free saucer.
Our plates are beautiful any way you use them . The Wexford pat·
tern looks like delicate hand-cut · crystal and matches the cups
we 've been giving away.
They're p~rfect for everyday use and all type~ of entertaining .
Sta~ collecting a set of plates now at participating Ashland statio/ils .
You II also want to get our matching serving tray.

Baskets
' I Sprays
tllases

GOESSUR'S

I
I!

. ''
I

l·1

-Ashland.

I Blankets

l
I!

~"I
s

1·

Doo't Ml" "''" · Vol"" to 79 '

Jumbo Size Toiletries

oo • Cocoanut Oil Shampoo .
.c:astile Soap ShamP
Hair Tonic . Hand Cream
.
eCreme Hair Rinse. Cr~me
•Shampoo N'Egg
eAtmond Lotion
eAfter Shave
eBiue Petals Lotion

1'

I

~Cold

Cream
·and others

JEWELRY STORE

Extra Special
OU~

•we' will tdjust to this )~!'!!~~~,.!!
Cuanntee is

"'Solo" Styr~:ne Plastic

DRAPES
Fully
Lined

.. ,
'

.

. \

,,1}
.

BOYS SOFT

OR LON
DREIS
SOCKS
·
.

BATH ROOM
CUP
DISPENSER
Complete with 25 cups

REGULAR 57c

PRINTED
PlASTIC

The modern ,
sanitary way to
drinking cups
your Iamlly .
1for bath, I for
lkitcl•en.

¢'

Save

PR.
American Made ~'Bata" Quality
Womens &amp; Teens Low Cut

Cherry, Yellow or
Avocado Colors

tVhlte-$
4)1

PR.

EA..

1"0 INCH COLORED

Oxfords
Sf'ZE

'

Save 20c. Fits size 9 to
ll . Many Colors .
Irregulars.

"DuPonts" Teflon II Regular 2.98

Canvas
Navylllark·

Court St., Pomoror

- ·---- ~

~

~~:
$194
PRICE!
·

TO 10

No Scouring.
No Scraping•

i

Sa.ve Cash!
l. ;,l~-.1-.~

1 ...

The look Is new-New Colors, New heel
heights and designs. Select yours from straps,
slipons or ties. Our selection has a shoe for
every age for dress or casual wearing.

t

S.rvlng :
Golllpolh
Poi!Mroy, MldcliftJort,
ond
W. Yo.

ALARM

CLOCK.",,

14".serving tray. Only $1.39 with purchase.

Dudley's flol ist

·SPRING
SHOES

Dependable "Lux" Brand . 40 hour

FRY PAN

.$ 99

�,,

.

'

f

•
l - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972

-~~~~
. ~,-~:_ ·;S§:.'*'"''''~'"'*'"~"""~"~:mr

·

Church Class ,

Adult Class Meets

Community ~ Uses Acrostic
By Charlene Hoeflich ·
Comer
.\!

'

::~

An acrostic featuring the

word "Redeemer" was used by
i:: Mrs. Marjorie Bowen to ex;
Mrs. C. J. Cwrunings, the former Cressa Webb, daughter of plain Gild's plan of salvation at
Mrs. Eloda Webb, Middleport, is just back from a two week Thursday night's meeting of
vacation In Panama with her brother, Robert Webb, an employee the Willing Workers' Class of
Enterprise
United
of the LDc~ Division of the Panama Canal Co. there since 1956. the
Weather-wise it was quite delightful for Cress and her Methodist Church.
'
.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
ft'lend , Mrs. J. Wilke, who left' the rigors of upstate New York Beulah Utterback and Miss
weather to enjoy the comforts and beautiful weather of Panama. , Freda Lelving, it was exThe temperature was in the lkl's all the time they were there.
plained that the purpose of the
Traveling by jetthe two left New York onemorning at 10 and lesson entitled "The Father's
that evening were met at Balboa by Robert and his wife, who had Heart" was to · '1each us to
arranged lots of interesting things for the two to do during their pralse God lor His great plan to
,stay.
restore man's fellowship to
There was a transit of the entire canal with Cressa and her Himself."
friend being taken out to an incoming ship by harbor launch at 5
As Mrs. Bowen used the
a.m. traveling through the canal to Colon and then returning to acrostic to present God's plan
Balboa by train .
of salvation, Mrs. Delores Will
·
They were taken on a trip into the Interior where they gave appropriate scriptures.
thoroughly enjoyed not only viewing the beautiful country but Mrs. Beatrice Buck also
obsenoing the workings of the peoples and cultures. One of the participated in the program
things which they particularly enjoyed was a visit to a native which began with singing of
fair. They shopped at markets where goods from all over the "Love Divine." There was
world can be bought, had dinners at lovely hotels, took a trip to group singing of "Jesus Loves
view the old Panama ruins, the Spanish gold mines, last evidence Even Me," and the closing
of an old Indian culture, there, and the burial sites of the Chaco . prayer by Mrs. Agnes Weeks.
1 The wonder box brought by
Indians.
Mrs.
Bernice Evans was won
Cressa describes a trip to a beauty shop there as "something
by Mrs. Beulah Utterback.
else." The non-English speaking native girls do all the shampoos,
Members exchanged valensets, manicures, and pedicures and then a stylist takes over for tines and refreshments were
the comb-outs.
served to those named and
A lack of air pollution was particularly noted by the visiting Mrs. Nancy Smith, Mrs. Agnes
New,Yorkers, who observed birthday anniversaries while they Dixon, Mrs. Mabel Moore,
were there.
.
Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, and two
Both Cress&amp; and Mrs. Wilke are employed with the Trade guests, Mrs. Anna Wilson and
Unions of Binghamton, N, Y. and were interested in the many Patty Edwards. The March
construction projects underway in the Canal Zone and Panama. meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Smith.
INCIDENTALLY, CRESSA'S brother-in-law ,and sister,
Richard and Marie Pickens, took a trip to Florida"this winter.
They spent several days at Fort Myers, visited the Charles
Whites of Orlando, and stopped enroute home at Stone Mountain,
Ga. Mrs. White is the former Virginia Stanley of Middleport.
:,
BUTOI BACIITEL Is recuperating nicely from the appendectomy he underwent Saturday at the Luke Air Force Base
Military Hospital their in Phoenix, Ariz. Cards may be sent to
The
Rev .
Lawrence
Sgt. F. D. Bachtel at the hospital, Ward6.
Butch, we're sure, Is getting plenty of loving care these days, MacAllen of Elyria, a
not only from ht. wife but from his sister, Carol, who happens to professional ventriloquist and
be vacatloni"8 there. Both are registered nurses. By the way, magician, will be evangelist at
Butch's wife, Carol, is employed in the coronary care unit at St. a youth revival Friday through
Luke's Hospital there In Phoenix. lli8 sister and his mother, Sunday at the Rutland Church
Juanita, \'lbo have been out there for the past week will be of the Nazarene.
A talking doll used by the
returning home this weekend.
Rev. Mr. MacAllen called
BARBARA SCITES HAS .LEFT the Community Action "Gllspel Pete" Is used in
MacAllen's Bible messages.
Program where she served as home health nurse, and is now Services each evening are at
employed In the hospital at the Gallipolis State Institute. Her 7:30and on Sunday morning at
work lB with the retarded folk there and she reports a tremen- 10:30. The public is invited.
dous satisfaction in doing for these people who appreciate the The Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.,
1111a:llest attention.
is pastor. ·

programs were discussed. . .
A meditation was given ,by
Mrs. Frieda Mossman Who also
had the closing prayer. The
next meeting will be held at the
home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde Henderson.
Refreshments were served to
the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
McClung, Mr. and Mrs. Jew
Cobner,JanrleLeach,Mr.and
Mrs. Wllllam R. Stephenson,
Mr. imd Mrs. Eslie MOS8IIian,
Mr. aild Mrs. Fred Pullin$ and

Mrs. Myrtle · Durst was
hostess for a recent meeting of
the Sunday School Adult Class
of the Pomeroy Nazarene
Church.
The RP.v. Clyde Henderson
had prayer to open the meeting
with Mrs. Madaline McClung
reading scripture. WUllam R.
Stephenson . gave
the
secretary's report, and Mrs.
Barbara Colmer read the
treasurer's report . Ideas
concerning Sunday school

::::

SON BORN FEB.lO
Mr.and Mrs. Reaford Prater
of 2909 Grasmere Blvd.,
Columbus, are announcing the
birth of a son, Jeremy Cain, on
Feb. 10 at Doctor's Hospital
North . The six pound, 13 ounce
boy is Mr. and Mrs. Praters'
first child. Mrs. Prater Is the
former
Brenda Boyer.
Grandparents are Mr. and ·
Mrs. Willard Boyer, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs . Andrew
Prater, Pike County, Ky. Mrs.
Jessie Bowers and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Boyer, Middleport,
are great-grandparents.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Dwain~
"Salser are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Alice Virginia, of Ravenswood,
w. Va., to Mr. Clarence Haughey, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haughey, Sr., of Columbus. The bride-elect is
employed at the Holzer Medical Center. Mr. Haughey works
with the Porter Dry Wall Construction Co. in Columbus. The
wedding will be an event of March II.
'§3'1:'&amp;-X&amp;:=M-:::&gt;.:::~::::;:,&amp;,::~:':'?;1§::~:=:~1-z.:~:x(,l..~ •••

"l'i&lt;._,,.m;, ,.

I .Social Calendar
~

7'- The
DlliySentlnel)lidcUeport·Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972
'
'
.
.

daughter, lllella, Mn. Clyda
Btng; Mrs. Durst, and. Mn.
GladYS Gibson .

.

~

Gardeti-sJJoiii-On
The Dispatch Charities
Garden and Flower Show,
annually
attended
by
numerous Meigs gardening
enthusiasts, wlll ,open Saturday
and continue through March ~
in the Lausche Building on the
Ohio State Fairgrounds.
The nine.(Jay show described
as "a wonderland or
beautifully landscaped gardens and unique ideas on ways
to accent your home," Is·
sponsored by the Dispatch
Charities in cooperation with
the Columbus and" Landscape
Association with assistance
from the Columbus Allied
Florists Ass'JCiation.
Trees, sht-ubs, ground cover
plants, turf, fruiting plants,
flowering shrubs, spring
flowering plants, potted plants
in bloom will be included in the
16 landscaped gardens .
Among the unusual trees on
display will be a 15-foot
specimen of ficus decora,
. which usually reaches a height
of only a few feet in this area.
The gardens were designed by
professional landscape men
and were constructed under
their supervision.
Featured at the show will be
a display by the American
Rose Society and Consulting
Rosarians will be at the display
to answer questions on rose
culture.
Columbus garden clubs will
display flower arrangements
and ten special programs on
various horticultural subjects
will be given by well qualified
horticulturists.
Saturday at 3:30 Dr. James

T T.'

~·

'

'

'ta tton
· 11\'litT'g.ht

V 1St

'

'

Dudley's Florist

Serving:
Golllpoli~,
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio,
and Mason Co., W. Va.

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992·2342

Utzinger, Ohio State University Extension horticulturist
will speak on "Vegetables lor
Grand Master Visitation
the Home Garden." Dr. Utzinger was in Meigs County night will be Wednesday,
last week to talk on fruit March 8at Middleport Masonic
growing. On Sunday at 2:30 a Lodge with Fay Gullion, Grand
Master of Ohio, 12th Masonic
professional from Connell's
Flowers will give a demon- District, guest speaker.
Robert Beegle, Master of
stration
on
floral
Racine Lodge 261, asks that
arrangements and at 4 p.m.
members make their reserDr. Robert W. Miller,
vations with Blll Hayes,
agronomist of OSU , will secretary, by Saturday, Feb.
present an illustrated lecture
26. Reservations for the 6:30
on "Lawns."
p.m. dinner are $3 per person.
Programs on fruit trees,
Ladles are welcome.
annuals and perennials, herbs,
African
violets,
roses,
metropolitan parks and home
VISIT MRS. YATES
vegetable gardening will be
Morgan Yates and Shelly,
presented at various 'limes Cleveland, David Robert
during the show.
Yates, Sr., Cambridge, and
Also included will be latest Mr. and Mrs. Don Usle and
models of power equipment for grandson of Syracuse were
the home gardener plus a recent guests of Mrs. Geneva
variety of plants, plant foods, Yates, 619 Page St.,' Midseeds, and other gardening dleport.
materials, some of which will
be
for purchase
theavailable
commercial
booths. from
Prior to Saturday, admission
is $1.25 if tickets are purchased
from one of the garden stores,
floral shops or through the
Public Service Counter in the
Dispatch Lobby, 34 South Third
St.
Admission at the door is $1 .50
with children 13 and under
admitted free .
This 16th Annual Dispatch
Charities Garden and Flower
Show is a charities function of
,community interest to which

·moUBLE·I=REI:

w~

1
..

Mothers! Look At This

DRIVING•••

Mn..,•• hnra Center

up

lb.

lb.

8.

oz.

I
•'. ,,

•

t

..

&gt;,,_,

,,

·l~

~~--~

.'~"·· ~ ~~;

:~

t

'-j -t,

~.\ , ,

DOG FOOD

8:.. 69~

' :,

.

·

Big Special! By Carnation

REG. &amp;r
ONL~

'

.

MEADOWMOOR CREAMERY

BUTTER

CAN ONLY 29e

' ALPO
,
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE. ................. ;..

am

Mark V Has hJwer Frozen Food Prices!

CRACKER SALEI

-SCOT LAD SALTINES

4

-

l·LB. BXS

·4

la BXS

OCEAN BREEZE

Breade~

Shrimp
Pieces 16 oz. pkg.

$1.00

$1.00

FIRESIDE

MARK V'

REGULAR 7r
SCOT LAD

OOUPON

GAL
CRT.

59~

FOR

3.1-I.B BXS

1.19
-c...-

nit

COFFEE
WHITENER

CREAM
PIES
ICE CREAM
~

'MONEY·
SAVERS

MEADOWRiat

BANQUET

$

$

PINT
CRTS.

to~~

Sll!
1.19

GRAHAM CRACKERS

¥0••''''''"""'"'"'*----·--~

RC COLA

59~

16
I BOTS.

C,

lb.

(SUGAR FREE)

79~

CAN 59~·

All Purpose Crackel'S

Nr:=:Esc=AFE

$1

INSTANT COr"EE

Mark V The Originator
of Lower Banana Prices

I CYLINDER

....lA....
'"''"'wln._r
"'
It your car adlng up? His
•

the
bHn hord on your outo? Now'• fht

time to havt a tune.up. We can have
y_pur car running smoothly In no flmt.

BA,NANAS·

,----..,

II lOCKS

Service Center

TAIL

32 oz.

NEW SCOT LAD ROUND

MOORE'S

MUmiiS

BPAK

l••t ,, I

Make more profit for your company.
Dial your long distance business calls yourselt

124 w. Molin

lb.

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!

CHILl WITH BEANS. ~~~.~~.~·.~. . ~.~Noz. 39e
COFFEE . ~~~.~:. ~.~~~~~~.~..................:...... 2 LB. CAN'1.39
.SANDWICH BAG5.!~~~~.3 ~K~ '1.00
ORANGE DRI NK. ~.~~.~.~.~~~~~:~.....~~. ~~.!~.~...49e
Hamburg Dill Slices . .~~~.~~~~~............~.~.~~. ~~~. 39e
TOMATO JU-ICE .......~~~~. ~~ ....... 3 4~~i '1.00
.
EVERY DAY . - • - FAVORITE BREAD LOW PRICE 5 LVS. FOR 1• 00

..

Savt monty at Moore's.

SLAB
BACON

.,

DOU'BLE COLA

16 OZ. BOTS.

(READY TO USE)

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY 0.

..... , .. , lnetiel.

·MAKIS

SIMILAC ·
.,ENFAMIL

Special For Weight-Watchers!

7-UP

BABY FORMULA

II&amp;RBiock.

PROfESSIONAL TUNE-UP

.

'

SALT
FISH

••••••••••••••••·-~~~

.17 95

SUPERIORS

SPARE
RIBS

County's Oldest and ·Largest
lnsurance.r Agency

The standard deduction
is up this year. But
maybe you should itemize.

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon
PUR

~

SUPERIORS MEATY

THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY
Your be•t buddy Lenny might have told things about your income tax that you
COMBINED
MEETINQ,
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
never knew existed. Things ·that we know,
you to itemize your deductions because it
7:30 Wednesday at home of Southeastern Ohio Guernsey
would save you more tax dollars.
because income tax returns are our only
,Your neighbor possibly suggested taking business. .
Mrs, Karl Grueser; each Breeders Assn., and Meigs
.
the standard deduction because you'd pay
H &amp; R Block's fees start at $5 and the
member to take a bird feeder Dairy Unit, Thursday, 7:30
less taxes that way .
average cost was under $12.50 for
p.m. at Southern High School
And Frank down at the office
over 7 million families we se.rved
wednesday cafeteria, Racine . Selection
.
.
.
he
helps
everybody
with
last year .
beginning at 4:30 at Racine Meigs Dairy Princess.
their ·return .. , what did
Furthermore, if your
LOYAL WOMEN'S Class of
Wesleyan United Methodist
Frank recommend?
return is aUdited we will
Church , Sandwiches, bean and Middleport Church of Christ,
If ·there's ~me way to
accompany you, at no
save you nJtWe,y on your
extra cost, to the In· ·
vegetable soup will be served. 7:30p.m., Thursday, home of
income
tax,
H
&amp;
R
Mrs.
Oscar
Roush.
ternal Revenue Service
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Block
will
know
how
and explain how your
WOMEN'S ASSN. at MidWednesday, Pomeroy United
to
do
it.
return
· was prepared,
dleport
First
United
Methodist Church.
Itemized and stand·
we will not
even
though
OHIO VALLEY Com- Presbytercan Church , ' : 30
ard deductions are noth·
act as your legal repre·
ing new. We've been
sentative.
man4ery 24, Knights Templar, p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Rict.ard
Karr,
devotionals;
Mrs.
Walter
preparing
returns
for
years
It means that H &amp; R
7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
Waddell,
program
book
using
both,
We'll
figure
out
BlD&lt;:k
also offers you year
Wednesday. Potluck dinner at
your situation both , ways and
'round tax service for just one
review,
"Oak
Lane
Story/'
6:30p.m. for Sir Knights, their
then prepare your return using the
low fee, with no extra charge for
Members take a toy for
ladies and families.
method
that's
best
for
you.
audits
and estimates.
SOUP SUPPER, beginning Veterans Memorial Hospital.
You
see,
for
only
a
few
dollaro
more
than
Yes. it's true. The standard deduction ia
Hostesses, Mrs. Karl Owens,
it costs to do it youneU (with advice maybe
up this year.
4:30 p.m., Wednesday,. at Mrs . Harry Moore, Miss
from some other amateur), you can have
It'o one of the many things we11 consider
Ractne Wesleyan Umted Ph llis Joachim Mrs. Lorna
your tax return prepared with complete
when we do your return.
. M~th~ltst Church. Menu, so~p, . o:.ns. ·
·'
confidentiality by a specially trained mem·
p1e, sandwtches, coffee.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
her of the H &amp; R Block team. There are ..,I)ON!T\ii Att 1:AIIi~'ifiR 1 DO
thousands of them . in over 6,000 conven·
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, home of
HaR BLOCK'S JOB. ·
iently
llicated offices.
Amencan Legton, 8 p.m. Mr and Mrs Amos Leonard.
Each member of H &amp; R Block is warm,
Wednesday , post everlastinc
·
·
.
.
friendly
and anxious to help you. A visit to
ceremony in memory of
TWIN CITY Shrmettes, 7.30
H &amp; R Block usually takes just a short
.departed members. Members Thursday, Columbu~ and
time. Once in our office, you sit down over
of immediate families invited. Southern Ohto Electrtc Co.
a free cup of coffee and poBSibly learn
1\ei.u•elu•e •'
Business meeting 7:30 p.m. Members to take bottle caps
Refreshments following the for redemption.
ceremony .
9 A.M. To 5 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
PHONE : 992·3795
AMERICAN LEGION
NO
APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
There are well over 600
OP-EN
TODAY
Post
128,
7:30
p.m. million pets in the United
Americanism program to be States,
presented by the Junior
Auxiliary members whose •
meeting on Tuesday night has
you 'll often save from 44'/oto 61'/o com, profit comes personal profit.
been cancelled.
The difference between income
THURSDAY
pared with person-to-person calls.•
and outgo is profit. So, when you 're
"The people you can lalk lo One-to-One."
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
In the course of a business year the
making outgoing long distance cal ls
Lions Club, special , Ladies
savings can add
to real money
make th em more profitable by
Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
for
your
company.
And,
we needn' t
dialing them yourself.
the Pomeroy United Methodist
remind you that out of company
&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
If you invest a few second's dialing
Church. Entertainment to
follow the meeting.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
CLUB will meet Thursday
evening, Feb . 24, at the
WUiiams-Balderson home,
with Mrs. Donald Putman as
co-hostess. Members are to
bring coupons. An auction sale
will be held.

many hundreds of crippled and • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ,
retarded.children will be aided
I .

..,..

...'

-LUNCH
MEATS

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Me~

""''l'

lb.

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

8

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Choice!
Golden
,Ripe!

Pomeroy

Ph. 992·2141

~PIS

I

lb.

·'

;SuPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to.10 • Sun.
,

.

We Accept Federal tOOd Stamps

' Comer Mill and SecoiKI·..Sts.

~

;

&lt;'

POLISH
SAUSAGE
'

~

~
•'

SUPERIORS

SPRING TREAT

d MarCh 8
r UJ.nne
m~

Low Prices On SuperU)rs Meau

~FRYER

Gospel Pete
Backs Speakershv;~~ ~~~PER

~

I'

'

.

PHONE: 992·3480
" We Reserve The Right. To Limil Ouonfities"

MIQDLEPORT,, Q.·

�,,

.

'

f

•
l - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972

-~~~~
. ~,-~:_ ·;S§:.'*'"''''~'"'*'"~"""~"~:mr

·

Church Class ,

Adult Class Meets

Community ~ Uses Acrostic
By Charlene Hoeflich ·
Comer
.\!

'

::~

An acrostic featuring the

word "Redeemer" was used by
i:: Mrs. Marjorie Bowen to ex;
Mrs. C. J. Cwrunings, the former Cressa Webb, daughter of plain Gild's plan of salvation at
Mrs. Eloda Webb, Middleport, is just back from a two week Thursday night's meeting of
vacation In Panama with her brother, Robert Webb, an employee the Willing Workers' Class of
Enterprise
United
of the LDc~ Division of the Panama Canal Co. there since 1956. the
Weather-wise it was quite delightful for Cress and her Methodist Church.
'
.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
ft'lend , Mrs. J. Wilke, who left' the rigors of upstate New York Beulah Utterback and Miss
weather to enjoy the comforts and beautiful weather of Panama. , Freda Lelving, it was exThe temperature was in the lkl's all the time they were there.
plained that the purpose of the
Traveling by jetthe two left New York onemorning at 10 and lesson entitled "The Father's
that evening were met at Balboa by Robert and his wife, who had Heart" was to · '1each us to
arranged lots of interesting things for the two to do during their pralse God lor His great plan to
,stay.
restore man's fellowship to
There was a transit of the entire canal with Cressa and her Himself."
friend being taken out to an incoming ship by harbor launch at 5
As Mrs. Bowen used the
a.m. traveling through the canal to Colon and then returning to acrostic to present God's plan
Balboa by train .
of salvation, Mrs. Delores Will
·
They were taken on a trip into the Interior where they gave appropriate scriptures.
thoroughly enjoyed not only viewing the beautiful country but Mrs. Beatrice Buck also
obsenoing the workings of the peoples and cultures. One of the participated in the program
things which they particularly enjoyed was a visit to a native which began with singing of
fair. They shopped at markets where goods from all over the "Love Divine." There was
world can be bought, had dinners at lovely hotels, took a trip to group singing of "Jesus Loves
view the old Panama ruins, the Spanish gold mines, last evidence Even Me," and the closing
of an old Indian culture, there, and the burial sites of the Chaco . prayer by Mrs. Agnes Weeks.
1 The wonder box brought by
Indians.
Mrs.
Bernice Evans was won
Cressa describes a trip to a beauty shop there as "something
by Mrs. Beulah Utterback.
else." The non-English speaking native girls do all the shampoos,
Members exchanged valensets, manicures, and pedicures and then a stylist takes over for tines and refreshments were
the comb-outs.
served to those named and
A lack of air pollution was particularly noted by the visiting Mrs. Nancy Smith, Mrs. Agnes
New,Yorkers, who observed birthday anniversaries while they Dixon, Mrs. Mabel Moore,
were there.
.
Mrs. Cordelia Bentz, and two
Both Cress&amp; and Mrs. Wilke are employed with the Trade guests, Mrs. Anna Wilson and
Unions of Binghamton, N, Y. and were interested in the many Patty Edwards. The March
construction projects underway in the Canal Zone and Panama. meeting will be at the home of
Mrs. Smith.
INCIDENTALLY, CRESSA'S brother-in-law ,and sister,
Richard and Marie Pickens, took a trip to Florida"this winter.
They spent several days at Fort Myers, visited the Charles
Whites of Orlando, and stopped enroute home at Stone Mountain,
Ga. Mrs. White is the former Virginia Stanley of Middleport.
:,
BUTOI BACIITEL Is recuperating nicely from the appendectomy he underwent Saturday at the Luke Air Force Base
Military Hospital their in Phoenix, Ariz. Cards may be sent to
The
Rev .
Lawrence
Sgt. F. D. Bachtel at the hospital, Ward6.
Butch, we're sure, Is getting plenty of loving care these days, MacAllen of Elyria, a
not only from ht. wife but from his sister, Carol, who happens to professional ventriloquist and
be vacatloni"8 there. Both are registered nurses. By the way, magician, will be evangelist at
Butch's wife, Carol, is employed in the coronary care unit at St. a youth revival Friday through
Luke's Hospital there In Phoenix. lli8 sister and his mother, Sunday at the Rutland Church
Juanita, \'lbo have been out there for the past week will be of the Nazarene.
A talking doll used by the
returning home this weekend.
Rev. Mr. MacAllen called
BARBARA SCITES HAS .LEFT the Community Action "Gllspel Pete" Is used in
MacAllen's Bible messages.
Program where she served as home health nurse, and is now Services each evening are at
employed In the hospital at the Gallipolis State Institute. Her 7:30and on Sunday morning at
work lB with the retarded folk there and she reports a tremen- 10:30. The public is invited.
dous satisfaction in doing for these people who appreciate the The Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.,
1111a:llest attention.
is pastor. ·

programs were discussed. . .
A meditation was given ,by
Mrs. Frieda Mossman Who also
had the closing prayer. The
next meeting will be held at the
home of the Rev. and Mrs.
Clyde Henderson.
Refreshments were served to
the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Glen
McClung, Mr. and Mrs. Jew
Cobner,JanrleLeach,Mr.and
Mrs. Wllllam R. Stephenson,
Mr. imd Mrs. Eslie MOS8IIian,
Mr. aild Mrs. Fred Pullin$ and

Mrs. Myrtle · Durst was
hostess for a recent meeting of
the Sunday School Adult Class
of the Pomeroy Nazarene
Church.
The RP.v. Clyde Henderson
had prayer to open the meeting
with Mrs. Madaline McClung
reading scripture. WUllam R.
Stephenson . gave
the
secretary's report, and Mrs.
Barbara Colmer read the
treasurer's report . Ideas
concerning Sunday school

::::

SON BORN FEB.lO
Mr.and Mrs. Reaford Prater
of 2909 Grasmere Blvd.,
Columbus, are announcing the
birth of a son, Jeremy Cain, on
Feb. 10 at Doctor's Hospital
North . The six pound, 13 ounce
boy is Mr. and Mrs. Praters'
first child. Mrs. Prater Is the
former
Brenda Boyer.
Grandparents are Mr. and ·
Mrs. Willard Boyer, Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs . Andrew
Prater, Pike County, Ky. Mrs.
Jessie Bowers and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Boyer, Middleport,
are great-grandparents.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED -Mr. and Mrs. Dwain~
"Salser are announcing the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Alice Virginia, of Ravenswood,
w. Va., to Mr. Clarence Haughey, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Haughey, Sr., of Columbus. The bride-elect is
employed at the Holzer Medical Center. Mr. Haughey works
with the Porter Dry Wall Construction Co. in Columbus. The
wedding will be an event of March II.
'§3'1:'&amp;-X&amp;:=M-:::&gt;.:::~::::;:,&amp;,::~:':'?;1§::~:=:~1-z.:~:x(,l..~ •••

"l'i&lt;._,,.m;, ,.

I .Social Calendar
~

7'- The
DlliySentlnel)lidcUeport·Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 22, 1972
'
'
.
.

daughter, lllella, Mn. Clyda
Btng; Mrs. Durst, and. Mn.
GladYS Gibson .

.

~

Gardeti-sJJoiii-On
The Dispatch Charities
Garden and Flower Show,
annually
attended
by
numerous Meigs gardening
enthusiasts, wlll ,open Saturday
and continue through March ~
in the Lausche Building on the
Ohio State Fairgrounds.
The nine.(Jay show described
as "a wonderland or
beautifully landscaped gardens and unique ideas on ways
to accent your home," Is·
sponsored by the Dispatch
Charities in cooperation with
the Columbus and" Landscape
Association with assistance
from the Columbus Allied
Florists Ass'JCiation.
Trees, sht-ubs, ground cover
plants, turf, fruiting plants,
flowering shrubs, spring
flowering plants, potted plants
in bloom will be included in the
16 landscaped gardens .
Among the unusual trees on
display will be a 15-foot
specimen of ficus decora,
. which usually reaches a height
of only a few feet in this area.
The gardens were designed by
professional landscape men
and were constructed under
their supervision.
Featured at the show will be
a display by the American
Rose Society and Consulting
Rosarians will be at the display
to answer questions on rose
culture.
Columbus garden clubs will
display flower arrangements
and ten special programs on
various horticultural subjects
will be given by well qualified
horticulturists.
Saturday at 3:30 Dr. James

T T.'

~·

'

'

'ta tton
· 11\'litT'g.ht

V 1St

'

'

Dudley's Florist

Serving:
Golllpoli~,
Pomeroy, Middleport, Ohio,
and Mason Co., W. Va.

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992·2342

Utzinger, Ohio State University Extension horticulturist
will speak on "Vegetables lor
Grand Master Visitation
the Home Garden." Dr. Utzinger was in Meigs County night will be Wednesday,
last week to talk on fruit March 8at Middleport Masonic
growing. On Sunday at 2:30 a Lodge with Fay Gullion, Grand
Master of Ohio, 12th Masonic
professional from Connell's
Flowers will give a demon- District, guest speaker.
Robert Beegle, Master of
stration
on
floral
Racine Lodge 261, asks that
arrangements and at 4 p.m.
members make their reserDr. Robert W. Miller,
vations with Blll Hayes,
agronomist of OSU , will secretary, by Saturday, Feb.
present an illustrated lecture
26. Reservations for the 6:30
on "Lawns."
p.m. dinner are $3 per person.
Programs on fruit trees,
Ladles are welcome.
annuals and perennials, herbs,
African
violets,
roses,
metropolitan parks and home
VISIT MRS. YATES
vegetable gardening will be
Morgan Yates and Shelly,
presented at various 'limes Cleveland, David Robert
during the show.
Yates, Sr., Cambridge, and
Also included will be latest Mr. and Mrs. Don Usle and
models of power equipment for grandson of Syracuse were
the home gardener plus a recent guests of Mrs. Geneva
variety of plants, plant foods, Yates, 619 Page St.,' Midseeds, and other gardening dleport.
materials, some of which will
be
for purchase
theavailable
commercial
booths. from
Prior to Saturday, admission
is $1.25 if tickets are purchased
from one of the garden stores,
floral shops or through the
Public Service Counter in the
Dispatch Lobby, 34 South Third
St.
Admission at the door is $1 .50
with children 13 and under
admitted free .
This 16th Annual Dispatch
Charities Garden and Flower
Show is a charities function of
,community interest to which

·moUBLE·I=REI:

w~

1
..

Mothers! Look At This

DRIVING•••

Mn..,•• hnra Center

up

lb.

lb.

8.

oz.

I
•'. ,,

•

t

..

&gt;,,_,

,,

·l~

~~--~

.'~"·· ~ ~~;

:~

t

'-j -t,

~.\ , ,

DOG FOOD

8:.. 69~

' :,

.

·

Big Special! By Carnation

REG. &amp;r
ONL~

'

.

MEADOWMOOR CREAMERY

BUTTER

CAN ONLY 29e

' ALPO
,
EVERYDAY LOW PRICE. ................. ;..

am

Mark V Has hJwer Frozen Food Prices!

CRACKER SALEI

-SCOT LAD SALTINES

4

-

l·LB. BXS

·4

la BXS

OCEAN BREEZE

Breade~

Shrimp
Pieces 16 oz. pkg.

$1.00

$1.00

FIRESIDE

MARK V'

REGULAR 7r
SCOT LAD

OOUPON

GAL
CRT.

59~

FOR

3.1-I.B BXS

1.19
-c...-

nit

COFFEE
WHITENER

CREAM
PIES
ICE CREAM
~

'MONEY·
SAVERS

MEADOWRiat

BANQUET

$

$

PINT
CRTS.

to~~

Sll!
1.19

GRAHAM CRACKERS

¥0••''''''"""'"'"'*----·--~

RC COLA

59~

16
I BOTS.

C,

lb.

(SUGAR FREE)

79~

CAN 59~·

All Purpose Crackel'S

Nr:=:Esc=AFE

$1

INSTANT COr"EE

Mark V The Originator
of Lower Banana Prices

I CYLINDER

....lA....
'"''"'wln._r
"'
It your car adlng up? His
•

the
bHn hord on your outo? Now'• fht

time to havt a tune.up. We can have
y_pur car running smoothly In no flmt.

BA,NANAS·

,----..,

II lOCKS

Service Center

TAIL

32 oz.

NEW SCOT LAD ROUND

MOORE'S

MUmiiS

BPAK

l••t ,, I

Make more profit for your company.
Dial your long distance business calls yourselt

124 w. Molin

lb.

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!

CHILl WITH BEANS. ~~~.~~.~·.~. . ~.~Noz. 39e
COFFEE . ~~~.~:. ~.~~~~~~.~..................:...... 2 LB. CAN'1.39
.SANDWICH BAG5.!~~~~.3 ~K~ '1.00
ORANGE DRI NK. ~.~~.~.~.~~~~~:~.....~~. ~~.!~.~...49e
Hamburg Dill Slices . .~~~.~~~~~............~.~.~~. ~~~. 39e
TOMATO JU-ICE .......~~~~. ~~ ....... 3 4~~i '1.00
.
EVERY DAY . - • - FAVORITE BREAD LOW PRICE 5 LVS. FOR 1• 00

..

Savt monty at Moore's.

SLAB
BACON

.,

DOU'BLE COLA

16 OZ. BOTS.

(READY TO USE)

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY 0.

..... , .. , lnetiel.

·MAKIS

SIMILAC ·
.,ENFAMIL

Special For Weight-Watchers!

7-UP

BABY FORMULA

II&amp;RBiock.

PROfESSIONAL TUNE-UP

.

'

SALT
FISH

••••••••••••••••·-~~~

.17 95

SUPERIORS

SPARE
RIBS

County's Oldest and ·Largest
lnsurance.r Agency

The standard deduction
is up this year. But
maybe you should itemize.

Tune Into A TUNE-UP Here, Soon
PUR

~

SUPERIORS MEATY

THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY
Your be•t buddy Lenny might have told things about your income tax that you
COMBINED
MEETINQ,
WILDWOOD GARDEN Club,
never knew existed. Things ·that we know,
you to itemize your deductions because it
7:30 Wednesday at home of Southeastern Ohio Guernsey
would save you more tax dollars.
because income tax returns are our only
,Your neighbor possibly suggested taking business. .
Mrs, Karl Grueser; each Breeders Assn., and Meigs
.
the standard deduction because you'd pay
H &amp; R Block's fees start at $5 and the
member to take a bird feeder Dairy Unit, Thursday, 7:30
less taxes that way .
average cost was under $12.50 for
p.m. at Southern High School
And Frank down at the office
over 7 million families we se.rved
wednesday cafeteria, Racine . Selection
.
.
.
he
helps
everybody
with
last year .
beginning at 4:30 at Racine Meigs Dairy Princess.
their ·return .. , what did
Furthermore, if your
LOYAL WOMEN'S Class of
Wesleyan United Methodist
Frank recommend?
return is aUdited we will
Church , Sandwiches, bean and Middleport Church of Christ,
If ·there's ~me way to
accompany you, at no
save you nJtWe,y on your
extra cost, to the In· ·
vegetable soup will be served. 7:30p.m., Thursday, home of
income
tax,
H
&amp;
R
Mrs.
Oscar
Roush.
ternal Revenue Service
POMEROY WCTU, 2 p.m.
Block
will
know
how
and explain how your
WOMEN'S ASSN. at MidWednesday, Pomeroy United
to
do
it.
return
· was prepared,
dleport
First
United
Methodist Church.
Itemized and stand·
we will not
even
though
OHIO VALLEY Com- Presbytercan Church , ' : 30
ard deductions are noth·
act as your legal repre·
ing new. We've been
sentative.
man4ery 24, Knights Templar, p.m. Thursday. Mrs. Rict.ard
Karr,
devotionals;
Mrs.
Walter
preparing
returns
for
years
It means that H &amp; R
7:30 p.m. Masonic Temple,
Waddell,
program
book
using
both,
We'll
figure
out
BlD&lt;:k
also offers you year
Wednesday. Potluck dinner at
your situation both , ways and
'round tax service for just one
review,
"Oak
Lane
Story/'
6:30p.m. for Sir Knights, their
then prepare your return using the
low fee, with no extra charge for
Members take a toy for
ladies and families.
method
that's
best
for
you.
audits
and estimates.
SOUP SUPPER, beginning Veterans Memorial Hospital.
You
see,
for
only
a
few
dollaro
more
than
Yes. it's true. The standard deduction ia
Hostesses, Mrs. Karl Owens,
it costs to do it youneU (with advice maybe
up this year.
4:30 p.m., Wednesday,. at Mrs . Harry Moore, Miss
from some other amateur), you can have
It'o one of the many things we11 consider
Ractne Wesleyan Umted Ph llis Joachim Mrs. Lorna
your tax return prepared with complete
when we do your return.
. M~th~ltst Church. Menu, so~p, . o:.ns. ·
·'
confidentiality by a specially trained mem·
p1e, sandwtches, coffee.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
her of the H &amp; R Block team. There are ..,I)ON!T\ii Att 1:AIIi~'ifiR 1 DO
thousands of them . in over 6,000 conven·
FEENEY-Bennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, home of
HaR BLOCK'S JOB. ·
iently
llicated offices.
Amencan Legton, 8 p.m. Mr and Mrs Amos Leonard.
Each member of H &amp; R Block is warm,
Wednesday , post everlastinc
·
·
.
.
friendly
and anxious to help you. A visit to
ceremony in memory of
TWIN CITY Shrmettes, 7.30
H &amp; R Block usually takes just a short
.departed members. Members Thursday, Columbu~ and
time. Once in our office, you sit down over
of immediate families invited. Southern Ohto Electrtc Co.
a free cup of coffee and poBSibly learn
1\ei.u•elu•e •'
Business meeting 7:30 p.m. Members to take bottle caps
Refreshments following the for redemption.
ceremony .
9 A.M. To 5 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
PHONE : 992·3795
AMERICAN LEGION
NO
APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
There are well over 600
OP-EN
TODAY
Post
128,
7:30
p.m. million pets in the United
Americanism program to be States,
presented by the Junior
Auxiliary members whose •
meeting on Tuesday night has
you 'll often save from 44'/oto 61'/o com, profit comes personal profit.
been cancelled.
The difference between income
THURSDAY
pared with person-to-person calls.•
and outgo is profit. So, when you 're
"The people you can lalk lo One-to-One."
MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
In the course of a business year the
making outgoing long distance cal ls
Lions Club, special , Ladies
savings can add
to real money
make th em more profitable by
Night observance, 6:30p.m. at
for
your
company.
And,
we needn' t
dialing them yourself.
the Pomeroy United Methodist
remind you that out of company
&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
If you invest a few second's dialing
Church. Entertainment to
follow the meeting.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
CLUB will meet Thursday
evening, Feb . 24, at the
WUiiams-Balderson home,
with Mrs. Donald Putman as
co-hostess. Members are to
bring coupons. An auction sale
will be held.

many hundreds of crippled and • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . ,
retarded.children will be aided
I .

..,..

...'

-LUNCH
MEATS

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Me~

""''l'

lb.

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

8

MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Choice!
Golden
,Ripe!

Pomeroy

Ph. 992·2141

~PIS

I

lb.

·'

;SuPER MARKET • Open ~ 9 to.10 • Sun.
,

.

We Accept Federal tOOd Stamps

' Comer Mill and SecoiKI·..Sts.

~

;

&lt;'

POLISH
SAUSAGE
'

~

~
•'

SUPERIORS

SPRING TREAT

d MarCh 8
r UJ.nne
m~

Low Prices On SuperU)rs Meau

~FRYER

Gospel Pete
Backs Speakershv;~~ ~~~PER

~

I'

'

.

PHONE: 992·3480
" We Reserve The Right. To Limil Ouonfities"

MIQDLEPORT,, Q.·

�...

'.

I

J•

8- The Daily Se~tinel , Middl•'lOrt-Pomeroy,O., Feb. 22,1972

·'

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! ·Sentinel Classifieds Get BeSults! ·
Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Debbie Norris, daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Norris,
is recovering satWactorily in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after emergency surgery. The
. family was enroute home from
a vacation •in Florida when she
became so ill !bey flew her in a
hoopital emergency plane from
AUanta, Ga., accompanied by
her mother. They were visiting
Rev . and Mrs. Freeland Norris
in Florida who also returned
with them to their home here.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson was
hootess for the Esther Circle at
her home Monday evening,
Feb. 14. Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
president, ope ned the meeting
with a worship service,
followed with a mission
program presented by Mrs.
Francis Morris, entitled
"Pressure Groups and the
Church." After the business
meeting, Mrs. Simpson served
refreshments at the dining
table decor ate d with a
Valentine theme. Twenty trays
of oranges, apples, cookies and
candy were prepared to take to
shut-ins for a Valentine treat.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle
entertained at their home
Sunday with a birthday dinner
honoring her brother, Charles
Edward Yost. Those present
were Charles Edw., Mr. Gene
Yost, Mrs. Matti~ Yost, Mrs.
Edward Foster, the hosts and

2 S1811S
Of
QUAliTY

•

ended their search for Skippy,
their black and brown beagle
dog. Skippy returned to the
Walker family Monday af-

tern

oom.

,1 ----------------- . .

Motor Co.

'·

Pomeroy Motor Co•.

.,..-----:------------- ----=-oY

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Chester

News Notes

By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs. Grace Kuhn returned
home after several weeks at
the home of her daughter, Mr.
and: Mrs. August Rocci and
family of Canton while her
daughter was hdspitalized.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles received word of the
death of his sister, Mrs. Bertha
Burns of Jacksonville, N. C.,
one day last week and his other
sister, Mrs. Okey Evans of
Grand Blanc, Mich., flew here
by plane and went with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. DinS:
more Boyles and son, Phillip,
to Jpck ~onville Friday to atIA!ndUI!e ·tuneral. Mrs. Eval!s'
will remain here for a longer
visit with the Boyles.
Mrs. Dana Hoffman returned
home Saturday from St. Joseph
Hospital
after
being
hospitalized there for eye
surgery. She is recovering
nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lemley
and son of Columbus spent
S1,111day with his father, Carl
Lemley.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parker
and family of Coal Grove and
Mrs. Lea Jean Hawkins or'
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh, local, spent ·
Sunday with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Arbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs
and family of Vienna, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis of
Success, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Babcock, Tuppers Plains, Mi'.
and Mrs. Starling Massar and
son and Mrs. Leota Massar of
Eastern celebrated the birthday of Gene Riggs at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Riggs and son of Eastern
SundaY afternoon. Ice cream,
cake ' and tea and Kool-Aid
were served.
Mr:"and Mrs. Page Westfall
of Parkersburg spent Sunday
here with her aunt, Mrs. Bessie
Websler.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Griffith spent Sunday with her
brother, Nr. and Mrs. William
Corns and family of Canal
Winchester.
Mrs. Ruby Cole was taken to
Parkersburg and admi tted to
St. Joseph Hospital for a heart
condition .
Guy Spencer was admitted to
Camden Clark Hospital Sunday
for observation.
Miss Ru thie Walker has
employment at the House of
Glamour Beauty Salon in
Athens and started work there
Monday.
Norman Will of Rutland
called on his uncle, Mr . and
Mrs. Jessie Newell Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Newell of
ChesiA!r also spent a recent.day
with the Newelb.
· Mr. and Mrs. John Newell
and two children of Columbus
spent a weekend with her aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker
and daughter, Ruthie. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Upton and two
children of Silver Ridge also
called on the Walkers Saturday.
Marvin and Mima Walker

1968 TEMPEST, 2 door ·
automallc. Phone 992-6547. ."
'
2-18-lfc '

1

their daughter, Patrece.
Mrs . -Ge rald Simpson
I
honored her daughter, Diana,
1
on her third birthday, Feb. 12
with a party at their home.
Those present were Lori
1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$2495
Simpson, Teri Shuler, . Linda
Local l owner. new car trade in, '13,000 miles, automatic
. Proffitt, Vickie Holsinger,
trans., luggage rack, radio. chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk. vinyl Interior.
Michelle Hand, Mike Hand,
Mickey Tucker, James Bush,
1970 CHEVELLE SSJ96 CPE.
$2295
Allen Tucker, Danny and Joey
Green finish, blk . vinyl roo_f, green vinyl Interior new
Wolfe, Joy and Kevin Spaun,
wide oval fires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
Mark, Sheryl and Glenn
sweetheart of a buy .
Simpson, Debbie Holsinger,
1966 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
Anna Lee Tucker and Shirley
S109S I'
New ring job, clean interior, good tires, r~dlo, heater.
Simpson . After games were
Sharp black finish .
I
played , Kool-Aid, cupcakes
I
and potato chips were served.
Mr . Kenneth Swart of
Akron spent a weekend with his
. mother, Mrs. James Swart and
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'
flptoiEROY, OHIO
the Alfred Crow family.
Mrs. Allen Graham and Eric 1
are visiting her parents, Mr.
WANT ADS
an d Mrs. Harry Willford.
INFORMATION
Mr . and Mrs. David Nease
DEADLINEs
For Rent
and son of Baltimore were
5
P. M.
Day
Befot"
Publication
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
weekend guests of his mother,
Monday Deadline 9 a.m . ·
bll h
Mrs. Carrie Nease.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
mo e ome aCross from
Bradbury
School. Call 992·
Mrs. Connie Van Matre of ,Will be accepted untll9 a.m. for. 5308or see Charles
Lewis, 2nd
Day of Publication 1
house south from Bradbllry
Clifton, W. Va., was a recent
REGULATIONS
School . Pets welcome .
guest of her brother-in-law and
The Publisher reserves the
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
right to eolt or rej ect any ads . ---------2-_21-ffc
deemed
ob"jectlonal. The
West and family.
publisher will not be
Mr. and Mrs. George Neigler
responsible for more than one Wanted To Buy
and David spent Sunday afincorrect insertion.
"' ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,...
1
RATES
ternoon in Parkersburg with
For Want Ad Service
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer.
5 cents per Word one lnserHon
Minimum Charge75c
12 cents per word three ·
consecutive insertions.
18 c.ents per word six cOn·
secutlve insertions.

Tuppers Plains
Society News

,...,.,

For Sale or Trade

BY CLARICE ALLEN
Mr. Douglas Wickham Jr.
and cousin, Richmond, 0 .,
were recent overnight guests of
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour .
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Will,
Syracuse, spent Wednesday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Denzil Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hartman and daughters have
returned home from a vacation
in Florida.
Richard VanMeter, Gary,
Ind., spent a few days with his
mother, Mrs. Mabel VanMeter
and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
Springfield, spent a recent
weekend with Mrs . Letha
Wood .
Mrs.
Thomas
Weber
received word of the bi~th of a
daughter , Amy Lynn, to
Reverend and Mrs . David
Belcastro of Rochester, N. Y.
on Jan. 14. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wilson,
Rochester, N. Y. Mrs; Weber is
the great-grandmother.
Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs.
Guy Summerfield have
returned from a aday vacation
in Jamaica. They flew from
Cleveland airport by Jet.
Mr. Ernest Fisher, Wooster,
and Mrs. Ida Christy, Akron ,
spent a recent weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Christy.
They were enroute to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Eichinger and daughter,
Cohunbus, spent the weekend
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk
and family, Hockin gport,
called on Mrs. Letha Wood
'
Sunday.
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Cleo Smith were Mrs. Thomas
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. John
Sayre, Miss {{athy and Miss
Barbara Jo Wilson, and Mrs .
William Call and son Bill. The
dinner was in honor of Mrs.
Weber's birthday.

25 Per Cent Discount on patd.
ads and ads paid within 10
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday.

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$6.00 Per Ton

r

1967 OPEL Wagon, 1%4 Ford, 4
autom•llc . Phone 992-

Z,

.Business Services

TEMPO mobile home, 50x10,
excellent condi tion. Phone
247-2161.
2·20-6tc
MINI bike. Phone 992-2044 or
see Harold Brinker.

The

Service
From the largest T ••••"
Bulldozer Radiator to the
,Smallest" Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator $peel• list

SMJ"nt· NElSON

.MOTORS. INC.

, Ph . ~-2114

Po~neroy

2-20-3fc

EXPERT

GOOD mi xed hay . Phone
Wilkesville 1»9-4777.
2-20-6tc

Aluminum
Sheets
"

.

USED OFF-SET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2(r
8

lor

your ,
private parties, banquets, '
special occasions.
Ideal for , meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges. .
.
Individual Cate•lng
Will seat up to 150 people.

.992-3975

.

Ph

one

606 E. Main

992-5786

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy.Home &amp;Auto
OpenHiiS .
Monday thru Satur&lt;Yty
606 E. Main, PGmoroy, 0 .

Mak~~~~~~

992-2094

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

For Sale
36' ' X 23" X .009

.

s5.55

For Sale

.

POMERO)"
HOME &amp; AUTO

Whj!el Alignment
I

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, ·
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-·
5443.
'
8-15-ttc

BALLS 0' FIRE!! IT SHORE
GITS LONESOME AROUND THIS
OL' HOUSE WHEN MAW GOES OFF
'TO VISIT HE~ SISTER ZONIE MAE ·
lN TH' FLATLANDS --·
.

~

'·

.I

'==jii~iifi~iif=~-r===:;~::::::::::~::::r'
~~::;;~;;;~:;~~~
j
"aJ.1. WEATHEJ ROOFIN_
G

2-18-ttc
AFGHANS - S50 &amp; 545; Quilts
- SSO; Quilt lops - $15; phone
992-2686.
2-11 -lOlp

.• f

··AN'TAI&lt;ES
OL' BULLET

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

&amp; CONSTRUCnoN &amp;

PLUMBING CO•
240 Lincoln$!.
Middleport, Olllo
· Dbll Anthony Pluniblnt
We have a complete Home
Maintenance s.,.,lce the yyr
around. No :matter what your
need . Complete roof or
spouting repair, Interior or
exterior carpentry. ·Ceiling
tile and Paneling and: Siding.
Complete
Plumblnr a.
Heating.
·Dly Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

A~ENEWEO

INTEREST tN
ACAOEMtAl

-"'

SOMETIME$

WOULD ...oiN A UNION .

,

•'992-5803 -742-3947 '·'
. 992-3898 -742-4761
..
. ·Weare fully ln~rtd. __ :

IJ'L ABNER

READY-MIX CONCRETE dellverad right to your prolect . •
Fast and . easy . . Free ·.
estimates . Phone 992·3284 ..
Goegleln Rea-y-Mtx 'Co .. ·:
Middleport, Ohio.
·
·
6-30-lfc, :

··

PAN~&amp;
')01) REMIND

I WAS PANTLESS AT
'/OUR AGE, TOO.(" THE
MEMOP:-1 STILL SENDS
SHIVE~ UP AND DO;o,IN
M'l SPtJ.JE..~'

APJ'. 'lOU?

ME OF
ANOTHER LOVABLE.
LITTLE. WAIF-MI.!!

~ , ·

..

i
WILL REMAIN

cancelled?

o~erator's

G000 IIORNING-

!MY I GIVE 'IOU
A LIFT?

:

t..1S.Ifc ·

-------BILL NELSON,992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

CALL
HILTON WOLFE,949-3211
D"ALE DI/TTON, 992-2534

DELIVERED

•'

SEWIN&lt;. MACHINE5. ReJNtlr .
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomoroy.
Authorized Singer Sates and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc

DRY WALL finisher contractor. - - , - - - . . , . - - R. I. Oubbetd, phone 742-5825.
FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows Rea I Estate For Sale
Builders &amp; Con.
2-21-Stc ALLSIDE
- $550; lent camper - $250;
Card cf Thanks
structlon Co. We specialize In
phone 667-3336.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
I WISH to extend my sincere
aluminum, vinyl and steet ,
INTER tOR &amp;exterior painting.
.
2-20-7tp
985-3529.
th anks to the doctors, nurses
siding;
fiberglas. brick and •
1-28-tfc
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
and hosp ital staff at Velerans
stone; complete line of · ·'
2-21 -Stc
_.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop,
Memorial Hospilal for the
residential and commerdal
Chesler,
Ohio.
Phone
985-3356.
wonderful care given me
3 BEDROOM ranch type home. Why buy new furnllure? Have
roofing ;
remodeling,
Tropical fish 15 cents and up Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
th 1 ld d
b s1
during my stay lhere. I also
building,
suspended
ceilings,
Plains. All . new wlfh total
a o ma e new y y via's
througtl February.
On Old Rl 33
"wish to thank my many
interior and exferlor pain·
2-22-71c electric and centra~ air
:ifohol slerlng Shop, Mrs .
friends for the gel well cards
tlng ; complete line of
.
,
.
.
conditioning,
baft1
·and
~•
fully
oodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Phone
992.2689
that were so very much apMasonry
work . All work
HOUSE
Syracuse. Ohio.
.1o.JOtp
. h &amp;S building tots on carpe1e d, f u11 basement.preciated .
guaranteed to customer
2
Wng
I lreet in Pomeroy. gara~e In basement. See by .
Chrisie Powell •-llllllliPoioiiimiieiiiltl.'.,Ohii ioiO..- . j
satisfaction. We are fully
Phone
742-5937.
appotnfm"''f, phone 992-2196 . BACKHOE AND DOZEifw.X:k:'
2-22-llc
Insured for your protection. 32
2-16-6tc or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
- - - - -- - - OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak ~-------Financing available.
. Septic tanks Installed. George : N. Second, ph. 992·3918.
lables,
Brass
beds,
dishes,
.
....
2·15-301~
. In Mell)ory
_.L. . Early Am
. erlcan ,,.
..
.
.\ . l!ll;j .
12 . 30.tfc· (Bitt! Pullins. Phone 992-2478.1 .•
Clocks, and -or cQmp)ete COb,,~~ lA
~,l ki
Stereo.
AM-FM
rad1o
com'
.,
•
•
A.lS.tf.
c
IN MEMORY ol Roberta M. households . Write M. ' D.
Lee, who passed away Miller, "Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
binalion, 4 speed changer, 4 30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom SIGNS," posters, mall bOxes and Auto Sales"
speaker sound system .
home, eleclrlc heal. vinyl .favorite saying ; hand letCall 992-6211 .
..
February 22, 1968.
Sal ance $79 .32 . Use our
siding, TP&amp;C wa ter district, 3 tered; In your favorite style. '57 CHEVY '14-ton piCkup, exGod halh not promised skies
~-17-11&gt;;.
budge I terms. Call 992-7085.
miles south' of Tuppers Plains David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany, . cellenl condition. Almost new
always blue,
· GOOD
·
engine. Phone 992-2967 after 5
Flower.strewn pathways al l our
ood useCad chai:rs, prefer -::-:::-:-~~-,----2-·_
16-6tc
on Counly Road 28 - $18,000; Ohio 45710 (Pagetownl .
p.m.
.
lives through ;
w en. II 992-9972.
BE A"UT IF UL MODERN
phone 667 ·3336·
2-6-JOtc'
2-20-3tc ·
God halh not promised Sun
2-16-6tp
2·20·7fp --,---~Walnut Slereo-radlo comwithout rain ,
""CO=R-:-V:-::E=T-45_4_4--speed
'
binallon, 4 speaker sound
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANI"' :-:19"'7o,..._
Joy wi thout sorrow, pea ce Help Wanted
system, 4 speed changer, HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights. REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6:.. convertible. Good condition.
without pain .
separate controls . Balance
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
4782, Gallipolis. John Russett,
Phone 675-3340.
But God halh prol)11sed slrenglh RESPONSIBLE person to work
$68.56.
Use
our
budgel
terms.
2196.
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
2-17-6tc
and
manage
r
oute
.
Pick·up
for Ihe day ,
Call 992-7085.
7-18-tfc
5-12-tfc and
delivery
.
A.B
.C.
Rest for lhe labor: lighl for the
2-16-6tc -Nr·c· E 2 .. t
h
-.,..,.-- ... ~~-THE BEST deal In a new.
Cleaners, Mason. W. Va .
way;
·• ory ome wnn 1utt · HARRISON'S TV and AnTenna coR
or used mobile homo, try·
2-8-lfc
Grace for the trials, help fr om
basement.
2
lots,
new
forced
Service.
Phone
992-2522.
'
PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig-zag
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
above,
.
air furnace . Near Pomeroy .
6-10-tfc;:
sew ing machines. Still in
Kanauga, Ohio.
Unfa iling sym~afhy, undying
Elementary School. Phone
origi nal cartons. No at .
12-1Mote:,'
love.
992-7384
to
see
.
SEPTIC tanks cleanea. Miller
tachments
needed as our
The Ralph E. Lee family
Sanitallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. 164 DODGE pickup, 318 en9ine,
con trols are buil t ln . Sews
2-22-ltp
662-3035.
with 1 or 2 needlesi' makes
5-6 ply fires, 2 reg ., 3 mud2-12-tfc
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
snow; '63 Olds 98, 2 door.
monograms, and blind hem
Notice
Ernest Ward, Jr. 742-4289.
stitch.
Full ·cash price, $38.50
2-20-3tp
FREE puppies. Phone 949-4607.
or budgel plan available.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
2-20-3tp
Phone 992-5641.
2-16-61c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .:.
-------Broker
overwelghlf ladles, teens and
VACUUM cleaner new 1911
110 Mechanic St.
men Interested In a Weight
model . Complele wilh all
Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769
Watchers ( RI Class In
cleaninq
lools. Small paint
Pomeroy write : Weight
WE NEED ACREAGE
damage tn shipping. Will take
Watchers (R), 18.13 Section
$27
cash
or
budget
pla
n
ANYWHERE IN MEIGS
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45231.
Ph.
available. Phone 992-5641.
COUNTY.
10·3-ffc
2-16-6tc
RUTLAND
OFF ICE 992-2259 TILL 4:00
BEDROOMSBath, nice
3
EVENINGS&amp;
Employment
Wanted
SAVE up to one half . Bring your
k
ltchen
.
Large
lot
near
_
SUNDAYS992-2568
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop, EXPERIENCED painter. 125 BALES straw; 1 -2 gang
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
In terior and exlerior. Call plow; 1 - 3 gang plow; 1 - 3 schools. Only $6,000.00.
BABY FARM-I&gt; ACRES
LAND CONTRACT
Don VanMeter 985-3951. ·
gang, 3 point hitch ; 1 - 2'h
HARRISONV ILLE - 1 story
$1500.00 DOWN- $53 .42 a
11 -21 -tfc
2-16-12tp ion truck, P. M. Cowdery,
frame, 5 rooms, bath, nice
Long Boltom, Ohio.
month. 6 rooms, good well,
kllchen.
COMPLETELy
Radio and heater. See ·
spring, and outbuildings. 3
WANT WORl&lt;' at home a(( . HAVE welder, willlravet. Local
2-20-3tc
RENOVATED, garage
this little jewel.
utility room and cold room:
dress in~ and stuffing en.
welder wants welding jobs . 2 HOUSETRAILERS, 10 xi 50 acres.
vet opes. Rush self-stamped
Phone 992-5271.
POMEROY
small out - buildings
$10,950.00.
.
.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
2 BEDROOMS J. Bath,
'•
2.20 _61 c and 8 x 35, also 1 Chevrolet
Albany, Ohio, o45710.
school bus . Phone 367-7533.
REAL
ESTATE
IS
natural oak floors . Dne floor
-.'
H -lfc·
2-20-3tp
CLIMBING DAILY
plan . Basement, front porch.
Wanted To Rent
All utilities. Only $6500.00. POMEROY - 1'12 story frame,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms with
TRAILER space out of high MS 135 gas lraclor used 50
PLAINS
hours, 5 ft. bush hog ; Black 2 TUPPERS
closets, bath, cabinets In
water in Middl eport .
BEDROOMSModern
"You11. ·Like Uur &lt;.Nalh y
Hawk corn Planter; 3 Pf. kitchen and bath. Plains
kitchen, porches, basement,
VOLUNTEER DAY
Pomeroy area . local coup'le,
Way of.Polqg Business.''
hitch
;
auton1afk
water
CLOSE
t
N.
$6,500.00.
.
one child. Good references.
water . 4 acres for future
COLUMBUS- Gov. John J .
· GMAC FINANCING
soflener;
phone
367-7534.
·
WHY
CLIMB
STAIRS
Local
·
employment.
Will
·
Gilligan has designated Feb. 29
P.omeroy ~ :
2-20-31c building . Onl y 510.500.00.
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2 99J-5342 · ·
consider purchase if suitable
,...-:
NEW
HOUSE
Open
E
..
ntngs
'Til
1:00 .
bedrooms, bath, basement
All Volunteer Day in Ohio . The
lot. Phone 992-3855.
NEW
LISTING
)
Til~ D.M, Stt.
., ...
FISH, fancy
IN EXCELLENT CON :
2-20-3fc TROPICAL
day is se t aside in recognition
bedrooms, nice bath with
guppies. angels and breeders,
DITION, Iorge lot. $7,900.00.
of all volunteers in the many
shower. Natural gas fu r·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
WE HAVE Bli'?ERS, SO CALL 1965 BUICK Wildcat, 2 door
992-5443.
naco . Large closets In
For
Rent
or
Sale
agencies and in every facet of
CLELAND'S FOR. FAS1
Hardtop, 1 local owner' ex.
bedrooms : Carport . Lot ' ACTION.
12-30-tfc
·
conununity life. Witnessing the
3-BEDROOM Vlndale mobile - - - cetlent
condition, good tires
7Sx291. Price $20,000.00.
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn,
home, Ph baths, situated on ·
signing of the proclamation in
good
finish. Phone
extra
SPLIT-LEVEL
large storage building, 2 slory . 2143 or 992-2142.
choice rental lot ; call after 6 Mobile Hom~ Fnr Sale .
·
the Governor's Office were
4 BEDROOMs-Modern all
home, .4 bedrooms, bath,
p.m. weekdays or any time on
2-22·3tc
electric,
Ph · baths . . glassed In side porch, front
Mrs. Lynn Georgia, Chairman UPHOLSTERING SERVICt:.
weekend 992-5570, Herman ov.-:.12, ·2-bedroom, au -etectnc
air
conditioned,
8x20
ft
.
Porch
Basement.
4
acres
r'!ear
porch,
fuel-Oil
forced
air
heal,
complete selection of fabrics
Bolinger.
of Volunteers for the Franklin
11162 FORD Folrlane, 4 door, v.
, JUST $8,900.00
&amp;nd alum inum awning,
Middleport. $27,500.00.
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
2-16-6tp
8, motor overhauled, . new
County Chapter, American
al uminum skirting. com .
HENRY CLELAND,
up a nd deli ve ry . .Slater
transmission, good condition
pletely setup. Beautiful NOT SATISFIED WITH
Red Cross and representatives
REALTOR
Upholster ing, Rt. J, Pomeroy, for Rent
Phone 992-3663 oiler 6 p.m:
location. Owner leaving state. YOUR PRESENT HOME,
phone 992-3617.
2-16-6tc
of other service organizations.
2-22·3tc
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
• 2-J·JOfp FURNISHED and unfurnisheo
CALL US AND LIST NOW.
1-10-lfc NO CHARGE tF NO SALE.
apartments. Close to school.
Phone
992-5434.
Now 's Time To
••• ClpJcny ·
Notice
10-18-tfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Moytlt
ASSOCIATE
ORDER
LOSE weight with New Shape
Auto1111tlc:a
LOTS
100
X ISo and 3J x" 90;
992·3J25
992·2378
Tablets, 10 days su pply only
;2 spold oporotlon. '
Warehouses 32 x 75, ~5 x 50, .
,Cholet •ot ,.110 .
$1 .49 at Nelson Drugs.
""FIELD SEEDS
and ~ 3 x 48 . Call 99l-7118. to
temps .
Auto ,
LEVEL lol, 180' frontage,
2-21-31p
lease any or all of above at 610
~Yf.lttr
ltYt
located
on
Matn
Street,
,COt\ffOT.- .. (Tn'
E. Main St.
FERTILIZER
~son; excellent opportunity
:fnttr
of&amp; Pow~r
2-1t..6tc
for bllslness. While Realty, '
!Jn
Agitator
,
call Vera Eblen, Associate
SEED CORN
•
l'¥i'illl'"r"•-...
2 BEDROOM mobile home tn
Real tor 992-3020.
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
Order Now &amp; Savel '
Htfetf Htti ..
2-20-.ltc .
2·16-tfc
,surround -~lol.hta
TOTAL electric, 3 bedroom
:with ttntll, .•• ..,~
·1 BEDROOM trailer apartranch style ~ome with g~rage
:hH~ No hottpots,'
men!•· ideal for couples .
and pallo; wall to walt carj)et
.;o
e.•trdrytng,
'1220
Woshlngion
Blvd.
Contact McClure's Dair y Isle, .
over hardwood floors; built-In
Belpre, Ohio
992-52413 or 992-3436.
ki lchen ; air condltloneo, on
r:lt~
~~-~~
2-22-61c 1 - - -- ' - - --"--.U. corner to I 150' x 160'; located
* Wt
. Hln ..l
A l'AG
in Lyons sub-division below
fttll Ctrpet
KOSCOt KOSMETICS. They're 4 ROOM house wit~ balh, 2 car Real Estate.For Sale
Wahoma High School. May be
III'VItt
' Great : over 10 specials th!s
garage, nice va rd , good SIX R00Mhouse, ·1JJ tlutternut " ·sean afler 5 p.m. week days
, month . P!eose cal! 992-5113
local ion . For appointment Ave. Contact Ed Meorlck, 21371 and all day Saturday and
John·
Lyons ·
..
lor any Information, Brown 's.
call 99~ -2502.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus • Sunday.
Properly
.
.
2-8-lfc
'
2-22·61c Ohio: phone 237-•1334.
f42-4m
Rutl• nc1, 0 ..
__;_
2·20-6tc
.Arnold
.
.Grate
~--------~--~ --------------------.......:
11-21 -tfc

TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

GASOLINE AILEY

come alonq
and help!

.'

'

1.0 11AA LtVtt-llo
Iff£ llOO"!

CALLS

DID

Virgil B.

and

Teaford, Sr.

HARTFORD

The Daily Sentinel
614·992-2156

THEY GOT THREE CREEP'I" CHARACTERS
ROPED ~N' TIED LIKE STEERS ... AN'
THEY'RE HEADIN' THIS WAY! BEST
FOR US 1' MAKE OUT LIKE m:E_E
~

OUT COlD, SANDYt

--....,--~---..

I

... AIW HQtl TO 1Mf ACCOW. Ill: ARE
ALL F~lfNIIS MERE. I'd: MU5T 11!\IST

ONE ANOTHER •

WMPQ/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

,MOBILE HOMES

;

.

I

_

____

·.RUTLAND ·fURNITURE ·

_ . ......

J.&gt;-~---..:._....:...;,;_,~-__:- ·

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euaylst
39. Arab
chieftain
fO•.Rose
extract
fl. Insect

DOWN

I. Indian
tower
z. Gladiatorial
mtlleu
3. P.M.'s
address
f . Within
(coni b.
form)
5. Sing
6. Present

.

7. Its capital
lsReykjavllt:•
(abbr.)

Unoenmble tltne faur Jumbles,
one letter to eoeh INJIIIN, to
form four ordlnery wordo.

8. Trafalpr

I VE:TEN

Square
landmark
I. Essential
part
U.Birddog
16. Giant
11. Pacific
islalid
group
zt. Ultimate
zz. Dieter's
lunch
liS. Swamp
:U. Operatic
song

Ye~ier4a)''•

AMw•

29. Apartment
home
employee
.31. Craze
31. Bring to
bear
33. Wahine's
dance
36. Favorite
n . Kid's
game

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name

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I HAP IMAGINED IT! OH,
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It: .
CAP!'AIN EASY

. II

sur 11.1 \I?IJtt
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FOUND \I?IJ~
,I!LF IN A

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LONGFELLOW

One letter limply standi lor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, etc. Single letters.
apo1trophe•, the lenath· and formetlon of the worda are all
hints. Each day the rode letters are dlfterent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
ZJSS

QF

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FB

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TCJF
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GCVRECZC~L

Ynterday'a Crypto&lt;tuote: THE ONLY THING THAT -CON·
TINUES TO GIVE US MORE FOR OUR MONEY IS A WEIGH·
lNG ){ACHINE.- GEORGE CLARK
,..
n"' 11'72 Klnat

..

'F('I\turr~ ~~· nditAlP , lnf' . l
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veil
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role
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ete
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a piano

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opera

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wernlng
rf
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U.Digit
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sun-dried
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water
basin
Z1. Man's
nickname
ZZ. Subsequently
Z3. Molten
rock
material
25. Goose
genus
26. Welles
27. Fond du
--. Wis·
consin
28. Girl's

38. English

rDlJJJIOOID~;~::!!:!...Jr
.
.

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MILLER

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5. Backbone
11. Golf
club
11. Niche
13. Small
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1f. Threat-

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¥J.&gt;i/AAT'S GOHHA
HAPPEN T' ME IN
TtiiS CRAZY· LOOKtr&lt;'

ACROSS
I, Fashioned

Cleland
Realty

- - - -- -

tT!

LIT1'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

WANTED!

Carriers For
MASON

I

lHAT

....
,,

We talk to JOU
like a. person.

"*'

SYLV"TCR!

MI5~ WINKLE:. 1

Lost
your :
license? Call -"12- : .

. 2 66.

C'MON, aT IN ,_.!rl!! AA' Ail!:
FP: A .J08 ~11(1;
P'ftCMI6iP,

---

--=----AUTo\IOBILE Insurance been · :

The
Daily Sentinel

t

Wi6H 1lE CRIMINALS

' - - - - - - - - - - - " -·' · O' DELL WHEE.L allghment :
located at Crossroad$, Rt. 124.
, -- - - - - - - - - - ; - - - - - - : - - - -- , Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
FOUR NEW HOMES
Wheels balanced el.e cOPEN FOR INSPECTION
All
work .
troolcatty .
ONE HOME IN RACINE
guaranteed .
Reasonable, .
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
rates. Phone 992-3211
7-27-lfc
ONE HOME iN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
Complete Service
A 3 bedroot:n 516.900.00 home can be purchased with a
Phone 9~9-3821
monthly payment as low as $65.00 fcir a iamily with a base
Racine. Ohio
i
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 111, Pet. annual
Crltt Bradford
percen!•ge rate.
.
· S.1·tfc :

$1.00

"!MEN, MIHPJE, --..~
11-tE'f'D aNL.'f 'MJRK
BEIWEEN 9/&gt;NO S!

·TNE DORMS. ARE
·YAWN• TOO INOISY
FOR SLEEPtNG

I

�...

'.

I

J•

8- The Daily Se~tinel , Middl•'lOrt-Pomeroy,O., Feb. 22,1972

·'

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! ·Sentinel Classifieds Get BeSults! ·
Racine Social Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Debbie Norris, daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. Charles Norris,
is recovering satWactorily in
Veterans Memorial Hospital
after emergency surgery. The
. family was enroute home from
a vacation •in Florida when she
became so ill !bey flew her in a
hoopital emergency plane from
AUanta, Ga., accompanied by
her mother. They were visiting
Rev . and Mrs. Freeland Norris
in Florida who also returned
with them to their home here.
Mrs. Gretta Simpson was
hootess for the Esther Circle at
her home Monday evening,
Feb. 14. Mrs. Ralph Badgley,
president, ope ned the meeting
with a worship service,
followed with a mission
program presented by Mrs.
Francis Morris, entitled
"Pressure Groups and the
Church." After the business
meeting, Mrs. Simpson served
refreshments at the dining
table decor ate d with a
Valentine theme. Twenty trays
of oranges, apples, cookies and
candy were prepared to take to
shut-ins for a Valentine treat.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle
entertained at their home
Sunday with a birthday dinner
honoring her brother, Charles
Edward Yost. Those present
were Charles Edw., Mr. Gene
Yost, Mrs. Matti~ Yost, Mrs.
Edward Foster, the hosts and

2 S1811S
Of
QUAliTY

•

ended their search for Skippy,
their black and brown beagle
dog. Skippy returned to the
Walker family Monday af-

tern

oom.

,1 ----------------- . .

Motor Co.

'·

Pomeroy Motor Co•.

.,..-----:------------- ----=-oY

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

Chester

News Notes

By Mrs. Evelyn Brlckles
Mrs. Grace Kuhn returned
home after several weeks at
the home of her daughter, Mr.
and: Mrs. August Rocci and
family of Canton while her
daughter was hdspitalized.
Mr. and Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles received word of the
death of his sister, Mrs. Bertha
Burns of Jacksonville, N. C.,
one day last week and his other
sister, Mrs. Okey Evans of
Grand Blanc, Mich., flew here
by plane and went with her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. DinS:
more Boyles and son, Phillip,
to Jpck ~onville Friday to atIA!ndUI!e ·tuneral. Mrs. Eval!s'
will remain here for a longer
visit with the Boyles.
Mrs. Dana Hoffman returned
home Saturday from St. Joseph
Hospital
after
being
hospitalized there for eye
surgery. She is recovering
nicely.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lemley
and son of Columbus spent
S1,111day with his father, Carl
Lemley.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parker
and family of Coal Grove and
Mrs. Lea Jean Hawkins or'
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Wesley Arbaugh, local, spent ·
Sunday with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John Arbaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs
and family of Vienna, W. Va.,
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Justis of
Success, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar
Babcock, Tuppers Plains, Mi'.
and Mrs. Starling Massar and
son and Mrs. Leota Massar of
Eastern celebrated the birthday of Gene Riggs at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Riggs and son of Eastern
SundaY afternoon. Ice cream,
cake ' and tea and Kool-Aid
were served.
Mr:"and Mrs. Page Westfall
of Parkersburg spent Sunday
here with her aunt, Mrs. Bessie
Websler.
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Griffith spent Sunday with her
brother, Nr. and Mrs. William
Corns and family of Canal
Winchester.
Mrs. Ruby Cole was taken to
Parkersburg and admi tted to
St. Joseph Hospital for a heart
condition .
Guy Spencer was admitted to
Camden Clark Hospital Sunday
for observation.
Miss Ru thie Walker has
employment at the House of
Glamour Beauty Salon in
Athens and started work there
Monday.
Norman Will of Rutland
called on his uncle, Mr . and
Mrs. Jessie Newell Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Newell of
ChesiA!r also spent a recent.day
with the Newelb.
· Mr. and Mrs. John Newell
and two children of Columbus
spent a weekend with her aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Walker
and daughter, Ruthie. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Upton and two
children of Silver Ridge also
called on the Walkers Saturday.
Marvin and Mima Walker

1968 TEMPEST, 2 door ·
automallc. Phone 992-6547. ."
'
2-18-lfc '

1

their daughter, Patrece.
Mrs . -Ge rald Simpson
I
honored her daughter, Diana,
1
on her third birthday, Feb. 12
with a party at their home.
Those present were Lori
1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$2495
Simpson, Teri Shuler, . Linda
Local l owner. new car trade in, '13,000 miles, automatic
. Proffitt, Vickie Holsinger,
trans., luggage rack, radio. chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk. vinyl Interior.
Michelle Hand, Mike Hand,
Mickey Tucker, James Bush,
1970 CHEVELLE SSJ96 CPE.
$2295
Allen Tucker, Danny and Joey
Green finish, blk . vinyl roo_f, green vinyl Interior new
Wolfe, Joy and Kevin Spaun,
wide oval fires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio. A
Mark, Sheryl and Glenn
sweetheart of a buy .
Simpson, Debbie Holsinger,
1966 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
Anna Lee Tucker and Shirley
S109S I'
New ring job, clean interior, good tires, r~dlo, heater.
Simpson . After games were
Sharp black finish .
I
played , Kool-Aid, cupcakes
I
and potato chips were served.
Mr . Kenneth Swart of
Akron spent a weekend with his
. mother, Mrs. James Swart and
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
'
flptoiEROY, OHIO
the Alfred Crow family.
Mrs. Allen Graham and Eric 1
are visiting her parents, Mr.
WANT ADS
an d Mrs. Harry Willford.
INFORMATION
Mr . and Mrs. David Nease
DEADLINEs
For Rent
and son of Baltimore were
5
P. M.
Day
Befot"
Publication
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom
weekend guests of his mother,
Monday Deadline 9 a.m . ·
bll h
Mrs. Carrie Nease.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
mo e ome aCross from
Bradbury
School. Call 992·
Mrs. Connie Van Matre of ,Will be accepted untll9 a.m. for. 5308or see Charles
Lewis, 2nd
Day of Publication 1
house south from Bradbllry
Clifton, W. Va., was a recent
REGULATIONS
School . Pets welcome .
guest of her brother-in-law and
The Publisher reserves the
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
right to eolt or rej ect any ads . ---------2-_21-ffc
deemed
ob"jectlonal. The
West and family.
publisher will not be
Mr. and Mrs. George Neigler
responsible for more than one Wanted To Buy
and David spent Sunday afincorrect insertion.
"' ,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,...
1
RATES
ternoon in Parkersburg with
For Want Ad Service
Mr. and Mrs. Rob Palmer.
5 cents per Word one lnserHon
Minimum Charge75c
12 cents per word three ·
consecutive insertions.
18 c.ents per word six cOn·
secutlve insertions.

Tuppers Plains
Society News

,...,.,

For Sale or Trade

BY CLARICE ALLEN
Mr. Douglas Wickham Jr.
and cousin, Richmond, 0 .,
were recent overnight guests of
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour .
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Will,
Syracuse, spent Wednesday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs.
Denzil Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hartman and daughters have
returned home from a vacation
in Florida.
Richard VanMeter, Gary,
Ind., spent a few days with his
mother, Mrs. Mabel VanMeter
and other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Wood,
Springfield, spent a recent
weekend with Mrs . Letha
Wood .
Mrs.
Thomas
Weber
received word of the bi~th of a
daughter , Amy Lynn, to
Reverend and Mrs . David
Belcastro of Rochester, N. Y.
on Jan. 14. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wilson,
Rochester, N. Y. Mrs; Weber is
the great-grandmother.
Mrs. Buel Ridenour and Mrs.
Guy Summerfield have
returned from a aday vacation
in Jamaica. They flew from
Cleveland airport by Jet.
Mr. Ernest Fisher, Wooster,
and Mrs. Ida Christy, Akron ,
spent a recent weekend with
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Christy.
They were enroute to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Eichinger and daughter,
Cohunbus, spent the weekend
with Mrs. Opal Eichinger and
family .
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk
and family, Hockin gport,
called on Mrs. Letha Wood
'
Sunday.
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Cleo Smith were Mrs. Thomas
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. John
Sayre, Miss {{athy and Miss
Barbara Jo Wilson, and Mrs .
William Call and son Bill. The
dinner was in honor of Mrs.
Weber's birthday.

25 Per Cent Discount on patd.
ads and ads paid within 10
days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.SO for SO word minimum.
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1 8:30 a.m . to 12: 00 Noon
Saturday.

Poles
Maximum
Diameter
10" on
Largest End

$6.00 Per Ton

r

1967 OPEL Wagon, 1%4 Ford, 4
autom•llc . Phone 992-

Z,

.Business Services

TEMPO mobile home, 50x10,
excellent condi tion. Phone
247-2161.
2·20-6tc
MINI bike. Phone 992-2044 or
see Harold Brinker.

The

Service
From the largest T ••••"
Bulldozer Radiator to the
,Smallest" Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
Radiator $peel• list

SMJ"nt· NElSON

.MOTORS. INC.

, Ph . ~-2114

Po~neroy

2-20-3fc

EXPERT

GOOD mi xed hay . Phone
Wilkesville 1»9-4777.
2-20-6tc

Aluminum
Sheets
"

.

USED OFF-SET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2(r
8

lor

your ,
private parties, banquets, '
special occasions.
Ideal for , meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges. .
.
Individual Cate•lng
Will seat up to 150 people.

.992-3975

.

Ph

one

606 E. Main

992-5786

Pomeroy

OFFICE SUPPLIES

Pomeroy.Home &amp;Auto
OpenHiiS .
Monday thru Satur&lt;Yty
606 E. Main, PGmoroy, 0 .

Mak~~~~~~

992-2094

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

For Sale
36' ' X 23" X .009

.

s5.55

For Sale

.

POMERO)"
HOME &amp; AUTO

Whj!el Alignment
I

POODLE puppies, Silver Toy, ·
Park view Kennels, Phone 992-·
5443.
'
8-15-ttc

BALLS 0' FIRE!! IT SHORE
GITS LONESOME AROUND THIS
OL' HOUSE WHEN MAW GOES OFF
'TO VISIT HE~ SISTER ZONIE MAE ·
lN TH' FLATLANDS --·
.

~

'·

.I

'==jii~iifi~iif=~-r===:;~::::::::::~::::r'
~~::;;~;;;~:;~~~
j
"aJ.1. WEATHEJ ROOFIN_
G

2-18-ttc
AFGHANS - S50 &amp; 545; Quilts
- SSO; Quilt lops - $15; phone
992-2686.
2-11 -lOlp

.• f

··AN'TAI&lt;ES
OL' BULLET

and

FURNITURE
Stop In and See Our
'Floor Display.

&amp; CONSTRUCnoN &amp;

PLUMBING CO•
240 Lincoln$!.
Middleport, Olllo
· Dbll Anthony Pluniblnt
We have a complete Home
Maintenance s.,.,lce the yyr
around. No :matter what your
need . Complete roof or
spouting repair, Interior or
exterior carpentry. ·Ceiling
tile and Paneling and: Siding.
Complete
Plumblnr a.
Heating.
·Dly Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

A~ENEWEO

INTEREST tN
ACAOEMtAl

-"'

SOMETIME$

WOULD ...oiN A UNION .

,

•'992-5803 -742-3947 '·'
. 992-3898 -742-4761
..
. ·Weare fully ln~rtd. __ :

IJ'L ABNER

READY-MIX CONCRETE dellverad right to your prolect . •
Fast and . easy . . Free ·.
estimates . Phone 992·3284 ..
Goegleln Rea-y-Mtx 'Co .. ·:
Middleport, Ohio.
·
·
6-30-lfc, :

··

PAN~&amp;
')01) REMIND

I WAS PANTLESS AT
'/OUR AGE, TOO.(" THE
MEMOP:-1 STILL SENDS
SHIVE~ UP AND DO;o,IN
M'l SPtJ.JE..~'

APJ'. 'lOU?

ME OF
ANOTHER LOVABLE.
LITTLE. WAIF-MI.!!

~ , ·

..

i
WILL REMAIN

cancelled?

o~erator's

G000 IIORNING-

!MY I GIVE 'IOU
A LIFT?

:

t..1S.Ifc ·

-------BILL NELSON,992-3657
TOM CROW, 992-2580

111 Court St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

CALL
HILTON WOLFE,949-3211
D"ALE DI/TTON, 992-2534

DELIVERED

•'

SEWIN&lt;. MACHINE5. ReJNtlr .
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomoroy.
Authorized Singer Sates and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3-29-lfc

DRY WALL finisher contractor. - - , - - - . . , . - - R. I. Oubbetd, phone 742-5825.
FARMALL H Drag Disc, plows Rea I Estate For Sale
Builders &amp; Con.
2-21-Stc ALLSIDE
- $550; lent camper - $250;
Card cf Thanks
structlon Co. We specialize In
phone 667-3336.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
I WISH to extend my sincere
aluminum, vinyl and steet ,
INTER tOR &amp;exterior painting.
.
2-20-7tp
985-3529.
th anks to the doctors, nurses
siding;
fiberglas. brick and •
1-28-tfc
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
and hosp ital staff at Velerans
stone; complete line of · ·'
2-21 -Stc
_.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop,
Memorial Hospilal for the
residential and commerdal
Chesler,
Ohio.
Phone
985-3356.
wonderful care given me
3 BEDROOM ranch type home. Why buy new furnllure? Have
roofing ;
remodeling,
Tropical fish 15 cents and up Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
th 1 ld d
b s1
during my stay lhere. I also
building,
suspended
ceilings,
Plains. All . new wlfh total
a o ma e new y y via's
througtl February.
On Old Rl 33
"wish to thank my many
interior and exferlor pain·
2-22-71c electric and centra~ air
:ifohol slerlng Shop, Mrs .
friends for the gel well cards
tlng ; complete line of
.
,
.
.
conditioning,
baft1
·and
~•
fully
oodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Phone
992.2689
that were so very much apMasonry
work . All work
HOUSE
Syracuse. Ohio.
.1o.JOtp
. h &amp;S building tots on carpe1e d, f u11 basement.preciated .
guaranteed to customer
2
Wng
I lreet in Pomeroy. gara~e In basement. See by .
Chrisie Powell •-llllllliPoioiiimiieiiiltl.'.,Ohii ioiO..- . j
satisfaction. We are fully
Phone
742-5937.
appotnfm"''f, phone 992-2196 . BACKHOE AND DOZEifw.X:k:'
2-22-llc
Insured for your protection. 32
2-16-6tc or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
- - - - -- - - OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak ~-------Financing available.
. Septic tanks Installed. George : N. Second, ph. 992·3918.
lables,
Brass
beds,
dishes,
.
....
2·15-301~
. In Mell)ory
_.L. . Early Am
. erlcan ,,.
..
.
.\ . l!ll;j .
12 . 30.tfc· (Bitt! Pullins. Phone 992-2478.1 .•
Clocks, and -or cQmp)ete COb,,~~ lA
~,l ki
Stereo.
AM-FM
rad1o
com'
.,
•
•
A.lS.tf.
c
IN MEMORY ol Roberta M. households . Write M. ' D.
Lee, who passed away Miller, "Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
binalion, 4 speed changer, 4 30 ACRE farm, 3 bedroom SIGNS," posters, mall bOxes and Auto Sales"
speaker sound system .
home, eleclrlc heal. vinyl .favorite saying ; hand letCall 992-6211 .
..
February 22, 1968.
Sal ance $79 .32 . Use our
siding, TP&amp;C wa ter district, 3 tered; In your favorite style. '57 CHEVY '14-ton piCkup, exGod halh not promised skies
~-17-11&gt;;.
budge I terms. Call 992-7085.
miles south' of Tuppers Plains David Hooker, Rt. 2, Albany, . cellenl condition. Almost new
always blue,
· GOOD
·
engine. Phone 992-2967 after 5
Flower.strewn pathways al l our
ood useCad chai:rs, prefer -::-:::-:-~~-,----2-·_
16-6tc
on Counly Road 28 - $18,000; Ohio 45710 (Pagetownl .
p.m.
.
lives through ;
w en. II 992-9972.
BE A"UT IF UL MODERN
phone 667 ·3336·
2-6-JOtc'
2-20-3tc ·
God halh not promised Sun
2-16-6tp
2·20·7fp --,---~Walnut Slereo-radlo comwithout rain ,
""CO=R-:-V:-::E=T-45_4_4--speed
'
binallon, 4 speaker sound
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANI"' :-:19"'7o,..._
Joy wi thout sorrow, pea ce Help Wanted
system, 4 speed changer, HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights. REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6:.. convertible. Good condition.
without pain .
separate controls . Balance
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
4782, Gallipolis. John Russett,
Phone 675-3340.
But God halh prol)11sed slrenglh RESPONSIBLE person to work
$68.56.
Use
our
budgel
terms.
2196.
Owner
&amp;
Operator.
2-17-6tc
and
manage
r
oute
.
Pick·up
for Ihe day ,
Call 992-7085.
7-18-tfc
5-12-tfc and
delivery
.
A.B
.C.
Rest for lhe labor: lighl for the
2-16-6tc -Nr·c· E 2 .. t
h
-.,..,.-- ... ~~-THE BEST deal In a new.
Cleaners, Mason. W. Va .
way;
·• ory ome wnn 1utt · HARRISON'S TV and AnTenna coR
or used mobile homo, try·
2-8-lfc
Grace for the trials, help fr om
basement.
2
lots,
new
forced
Service.
Phone
992-2522.
'
PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zig-zag
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
above,
.
air furnace . Near Pomeroy .
6-10-tfc;:
sew ing machines. Still in
Kanauga, Ohio.
Unfa iling sym~afhy, undying
Elementary School. Phone
origi nal cartons. No at .
12-1Mote:,'
love.
992-7384
to
see
.
SEPTIC tanks cleanea. Miller
tachments
needed as our
The Ralph E. Lee family
Sanitallon, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. 164 DODGE pickup, 318 en9ine,
con trols are buil t ln . Sews
2-22-ltp
662-3035.
with 1 or 2 needlesi' makes
5-6 ply fires, 2 reg ., 3 mud2-12-tfc
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
snow; '63 Olds 98, 2 door.
monograms, and blind hem
Notice
Ernest Ward, Jr. 742-4289.
stitch.
Full ·cash price, $38.50
2-20-3tp
FREE puppies. Phone 949-4607.
or budgel plan available.
Real
Estate
For
Sale
2-20-3tp
Phone 992-5641.
2-16-61c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT .:.
-------Broker
overwelghlf ladles, teens and
VACUUM cleaner new 1911
110 Mechanic St.
men Interested In a Weight
model . Complele wilh all
Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769
Watchers ( RI Class In
cleaninq
lools. Small paint
Pomeroy write : Weight
WE NEED ACREAGE
damage tn shipping. Will take
Watchers (R), 18.13 Section
$27
cash
or
budget
pla
n
ANYWHERE IN MEIGS
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45231.
Ph.
available. Phone 992-5641.
COUNTY.
10·3-ffc
2-16-6tc
RUTLAND
OFF ICE 992-2259 TILL 4:00
BEDROOMSBath, nice
3
EVENINGS&amp;
Employment
Wanted
SAVE up to one half . Bring your
k
ltchen
.
Large
lot
near
_
SUNDAYS992-2568
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop, EXPERIENCED painter. 125 BALES straw; 1 -2 gang
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
In terior and exlerior. Call plow; 1 - 3 gang plow; 1 - 3 schools. Only $6,000.00.
BABY FARM-I&gt; ACRES
LAND CONTRACT
Don VanMeter 985-3951. ·
gang, 3 point hitch ; 1 - 2'h
HARRISONV ILLE - 1 story
$1500.00 DOWN- $53 .42 a
11 -21 -tfc
2-16-12tp ion truck, P. M. Cowdery,
frame, 5 rooms, bath, nice
Long Boltom, Ohio.
month. 6 rooms, good well,
kllchen.
COMPLETELy
Radio and heater. See ·
spring, and outbuildings. 3
WANT WORl&lt;' at home a(( . HAVE welder, willlravet. Local
2-20-3tc
RENOVATED, garage
this little jewel.
utility room and cold room:
dress in~ and stuffing en.
welder wants welding jobs . 2 HOUSETRAILERS, 10 xi 50 acres.
vet opes. Rush self-stamped
Phone 992-5271.
POMEROY
small out - buildings
$10,950.00.
.
.
envelope to F. Uribe, Box 36,
2 BEDROOMS J. Bath,
'•
2.20 _61 c and 8 x 35, also 1 Chevrolet
Albany, Ohio, o45710.
school bus . Phone 367-7533.
REAL
ESTATE
IS
natural oak floors . Dne floor
-.'
H -lfc·
2-20-3tp
CLIMBING DAILY
plan . Basement, front porch.
Wanted To Rent
All utilities. Only $6500.00. POMEROY - 1'12 story frame,
6 rooms, 3 bedrooms with
TRAILER space out of high MS 135 gas lraclor used 50
PLAINS
hours, 5 ft. bush hog ; Black 2 TUPPERS
closets, bath, cabinets In
water in Middl eport .
BEDROOMSModern
"You11. ·Like Uur &lt;.Nalh y
Hawk corn Planter; 3 Pf. kitchen and bath. Plains
kitchen, porches, basement,
VOLUNTEER DAY
Pomeroy area . local coup'le,
Way of.Polqg Business.''
hitch
;
auton1afk
water
CLOSE
t
N.
$6,500.00.
.
one child. Good references.
water . 4 acres for future
COLUMBUS- Gov. John J .
· GMAC FINANCING
soflener;
phone
367-7534.
·
WHY
CLIMB
STAIRS
Local
·
employment.
Will
·
Gilligan has designated Feb. 29
P.omeroy ~ :
2-20-31c building . Onl y 510.500.00.
POMEROY - 1 story frame, 2 99J-5342 · ·
consider purchase if suitable
,...-:
NEW
HOUSE
Open
E
..
ntngs
'Til
1:00 .
bedrooms, bath, basement
All Volunteer Day in Ohio . The
lot. Phone 992-3855.
NEW
LISTING
)
Til~ D.M, Stt.
., ...
FISH, fancy
IN EXCELLENT CON :
2-20-3fc TROPICAL
day is se t aside in recognition
bedrooms, nice bath with
guppies. angels and breeders,
DITION, Iorge lot. $7,900.00.
of all volunteers in the many
shower. Natural gas fu r·
Bellas and supplies. Phone
WE HAVE Bli'?ERS, SO CALL 1965 BUICK Wildcat, 2 door
992-5443.
naco . Large closets In
For
Rent
or
Sale
agencies and in every facet of
CLELAND'S FOR. FAS1
Hardtop, 1 local owner' ex.
bedrooms : Carport . Lot ' ACTION.
12-30-tfc
·
conununity life. Witnessing the
3-BEDROOM Vlndale mobile - - - cetlent
condition, good tires
7Sx291. Price $20,000.00.
DEXTER - Lot 150 x 100, barn,
home, Ph baths, situated on ·
signing of the proclamation in
good
finish. Phone
extra
SPLIT-LEVEL
large storage building, 2 slory . 2143 or 992-2142.
choice rental lot ; call after 6 Mobile Hom~ Fnr Sale .
·
the Governor's Office were
4 BEDROOMs-Modern all
home, .4 bedrooms, bath,
p.m. weekdays or any time on
2-22·3tc
electric,
Ph · baths . . glassed In side porch, front
Mrs. Lynn Georgia, Chairman UPHOLSTERING SERVICt:.
weekend 992-5570, Herman ov.-:.12, ·2-bedroom, au -etectnc
air
conditioned,
8x20
ft
.
Porch
Basement.
4
acres
r'!ear
porch,
fuel-Oil
forced
air
heal,
complete selection of fabrics
Bolinger.
of Volunteers for the Franklin
11162 FORD Folrlane, 4 door, v.
, JUST $8,900.00
&amp;nd alum inum awning,
Middleport. $27,500.00.
and vinyl to choose from . Pick
2-16-6tp
8, motor overhauled, . new
County Chapter, American
al uminum skirting. com .
HENRY CLELAND,
up a nd deli ve ry . .Slater
transmission, good condition
pletely setup. Beautiful NOT SATISFIED WITH
Red Cross and representatives
REALTOR
Upholster ing, Rt. J, Pomeroy, for Rent
Phone 992-3663 oiler 6 p.m:
location. Owner leaving state. YOUR PRESENT HOME,
phone 992-3617.
2-16-6tc
of other service organizations.
2-22·3tc
Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272.
• 2-J·JOfp FURNISHED and unfurnisheo
CALL US AND LIST NOW.
1-10-lfc NO CHARGE tF NO SALE.
apartments. Close to school.
Phone
992-5434.
Now 's Time To
••• ClpJcny ·
Notice
10-18-tfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
Moytlt
ASSOCIATE
ORDER
LOSE weight with New Shape
Auto1111tlc:a
LOTS
100
X ISo and 3J x" 90;
992·3J25
992·2378
Tablets, 10 days su pply only
;2 spold oporotlon. '
Warehouses 32 x 75, ~5 x 50, .
,Cholet •ot ,.110 .
$1 .49 at Nelson Drugs.
""FIELD SEEDS
and ~ 3 x 48 . Call 99l-7118. to
temps .
Auto ,
LEVEL lol, 180' frontage,
2-21-31p
lease any or all of above at 610
~Yf.lttr
ltYt
located
on
Matn
Street,
,COt\ffOT.- .. (Tn'
E. Main St.
FERTILIZER
~son; excellent opportunity
:fnttr
of&amp; Pow~r
2-1t..6tc
for bllslness. While Realty, '
!Jn
Agitator
,
call Vera Eblen, Associate
SEED CORN
•
l'¥i'illl'"r"•-...
2 BEDROOM mobile home tn
Real tor 992-3020.
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
Order Now &amp; Savel '
Htfetf Htti ..
2-20-.ltc .
2·16-tfc
,surround -~lol.hta
TOTAL electric, 3 bedroom
:with ttntll, .•• ..,~
·1 BEDROOM trailer apartranch style ~ome with g~rage
:hH~ No hottpots,'
men!•· ideal for couples .
and pallo; wall to walt carj)et
.;o
e.•trdrytng,
'1220
Woshlngion
Blvd.
Contact McClure's Dair y Isle, .
over hardwood floors; built-In
Belpre, Ohio
992-52413 or 992-3436.
ki lchen ; air condltloneo, on
r:lt~
~~-~~
2-22-61c 1 - - -- ' - - --"--.U. corner to I 150' x 160'; located
* Wt
. Hln ..l
A l'AG
in Lyons sub-division below
fttll Ctrpet
KOSCOt KOSMETICS. They're 4 ROOM house wit~ balh, 2 car Real Estate.For Sale
Wahoma High School. May be
III'VItt
' Great : over 10 specials th!s
garage, nice va rd , good SIX R00Mhouse, ·1JJ tlutternut " ·sean afler 5 p.m. week days
, month . P!eose cal! 992-5113
local ion . For appointment Ave. Contact Ed Meorlck, 21371 and all day Saturday and
John·
Lyons ·
..
lor any Information, Brown 's.
call 99~ -2502.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus • Sunday.
Properly
.
.
2-8-lfc
'
2-22·61c Ohio: phone 237-•1334.
f42-4m
Rutl• nc1, 0 ..
__;_
2·20-6tc
.Arnold
.
.Grate
~--------~--~ --------------------.......:
11-21 -tfc

TO

OHIO
PALLET CO.

GASOLINE AILEY

come alonq
and help!

.'

'

1.0 11AA LtVtt-llo
Iff£ llOO"!

CALLS

DID

Virgil B.

and

Teaford, Sr.

HARTFORD

The Daily Sentinel
614·992-2156

THEY GOT THREE CREEP'I" CHARACTERS
ROPED ~N' TIED LIKE STEERS ... AN'
THEY'RE HEADIN' THIS WAY! BEST
FOR US 1' MAKE OUT LIKE m:E_E
~

OUT COlD, SANDYt

--....,--~---..

I

... AIW HQtl TO 1Mf ACCOW. Ill: ARE
ALL F~lfNIIS MERE. I'd: MU5T 11!\IST

ONE ANOTHER •

WMPQ/1390
ON YOUR DIAL

,MOBILE HOMES

;

.

I

_

____

·.RUTLAND ·fURNITURE ·

_ . ......

J.&gt;-~---..:._....:...;,;_,~-__:- ·

.-----r---.

""'-':::.J l

euaylst
39. Arab
chieftain
fO•.Rose
extract
fl. Insect

DOWN

I. Indian
tower
z. Gladiatorial
mtlleu
3. P.M.'s
address
f . Within
(coni b.
form)
5. Sing
6. Present

.

7. Its capital
lsReykjavllt:•
(abbr.)

Unoenmble tltne faur Jumbles,
one letter to eoeh INJIIIN, to
form four ordlnery wordo.

8. Trafalpr

I VE:TEN

Square
landmark
I. Essential
part
U.Birddog
16. Giant
11. Pacific
islalid
group
zt. Ultimate
zz. Dieter's
lunch
liS. Swamp
:U. Operatic
song

Ye~ier4a)''•

AMw•

29. Apartment
home
employee
.31. Craze
31. Bring to
bear
33. Wahine's
dance
36. Favorite
n . Kid's
game

--

C ' "I~CIOuto'•-

•

HORCI

~

....

IHALTEL I

[J r)

I

(""'-n IIIII-

I

-

name

li&lt;ERE IT ~ANt&gt;.;"• ..Kifr /16
I HAP IMAGINED IT! OH,
Mt55 Slo!EfT5TOR't', t1VE (

FOmO L(OU AT LAST !

-

,~

---·- --- ..

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It: .
CAP!'AIN EASY

. II

sur 11.1 \I?IJtt
" DI1f;AM' V0LJ

FOUND \I?IJ~
,I!LF IN A

~
R Mf

AXYDLBAAXI
LONGFELLOW

One letter limply standi lor another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two 0'1, etc. Single letters.
apo1trophe•, the lenath· and formetlon of the worda are all
hints. Each day the rode letters are dlfterent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
ZJSS

QF

QWZPWFQLPE
FB

TBVG

TCJF
JVP

TCJF

KBR
IPF

'.

TQSS,
UPBUSP

CJVMPV.-WQGQFJ

E .

GCVRECZC~L

Ynterday'a Crypto&lt;tuote: THE ONLY THING THAT -CON·
TINUES TO GIVE US MORE FOR OUR MONEY IS A WEIGH·
lNG ){ACHINE.- GEORGE CLARK
,..
n"' 11'72 Klnat

..

'F('I\turr~ ~~· nditAlP , lnf' . l
J

I'

........,

Mlwerz Soauuil Ulre a erinae in ChU.n-A CUMI

32. Chalice
veil
3:1. Newman
role
S4. Negligent
35, Acceler·
ete
S7. Adjust, as
a piano

I

1

lo..W.., CHIIF LIMIT IGUANA IARIUM .
I•·

opera

- --

.

wernlng
rf
15. - Arbor
U.Digit
~:nl'l'l...,~
17. Mount,
uagem
--r:!~:.;~~S~' u. grape
sun-dried
%I. Holy
water
basin
Z1. Man's
nickname
ZZ. Subsequently
Z3. Molten
rock
material
25. Goose
genus
26. Welles
27. Fond du
--. Wis·
consin
28. Girl's

38. English

rDlJJJIOOID~;~::!!:!...Jr
.
.

Zl. Strauss

.,

------

ener's

l;O.j

m:

MILLER

..

· -.....:.

DICK TRACY

...

,.,
...
Dr,.,.

PAD?

5. Backbone
11. Golf
club
11. Niche
13. Small
salamander
1f. Threat-

ONLY '1195
·bn' "&amp;&gt;Van landt

12' .. 14' • 24' • wiDf

¥J.&gt;i/AAT'S GOHHA
HAPPEN T' ME IN
TtiiS CRAZY· LOOKtr&lt;'

ACROSS
I, Fashioned

Cleland
Realty

- - - -- -

tT!

LIT1'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

WANTED!

Carriers For
MASON

I

lHAT

....
,,

We talk to JOU
like a. person.

"*'

SYLV"TCR!

MI5~ WINKLE:. 1

Lost
your :
license? Call -"12- : .

. 2 66.

C'MON, aT IN ,_.!rl!! AA' Ail!:
FP: A .J08 ~11(1;
P'ftCMI6iP,

---

--=----AUTo\IOBILE Insurance been · :

The
Daily Sentinel

t

Wi6H 1lE CRIMINALS

' - - - - - - - - - - - " -·' · O' DELL WHEE.L allghment :
located at Crossroad$, Rt. 124.
, -- - - - - - - - - - ; - - - - - - : - - - -- , Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
FOUR NEW HOMES
Wheels balanced el.e cOPEN FOR INSPECTION
All
work .
troolcatty .
ONE HOME IN RACINE
guaranteed .
Reasonable, .
TWO HOMES IN SYRACUSE
rates. Phone 992-3211
7-27-lfc
ONE HOME iN MIDDLEPORT
NO MONEY DOWN
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
100 PCT. FINANCING AVAILABLE
Complete Service
A 3 bedroot:n 516.900.00 home can be purchased with a
Phone 9~9-3821
monthly payment as low as $65.00 fcir a iamily with a base
Racine. Ohio
i
salary of $5,000.00 and three children. 111, Pet. annual
Crltt Bradford
percen!•ge rate.
.
· S.1·tfc :

$1.00

"!MEN, MIHPJE, --..~
11-tE'f'D aNL.'f 'MJRK
BEIWEEN 9/&gt;NO S!

·TNE DORMS. ARE
·YAWN• TOO INOISY
FOR SLEEPtNG

I

�•
10- The Dally Sentinel,MlckDeport·Pomeroy, o .. f't·~. :!2. l!li~

Trial of Seven Opens
.
HARRISBURG, P•. (UPI)-

The beanpole of a man drew his
6-foot-4 fr811le erect before the
jury, thrust both hands Into bls
pants pockets, and with a
slightly sad look on his lean
face began a short and quietspoken opening statement for
the defense.
"I will say fhat I don't like to

Orlna .

ruen·illas Hold Plane
With Joe Kennedy III

say," Ramsey aar~. former
Sitting at a government table
attorney general of the United near blm was a prosecutor who
States, . tqld the nine women had once worked under Clark
and three men of the in the Justice Departinent.
Harrisburg Seven Jury. "The Wllllam S. Lynch, yellowevidence · will show that the haired, chunky and .forceful,
government's charges are opened for the government
false."
Monday before Clark spoke
"It charges a conspiracy. and he too said:
There was no conspiracy-no
"You don't check your Godagreement. You have to draw given common sense at the
on your common sense ... "
courthouse door."

By United Preis IDierutloaal

A band of Arab guerrUias
hijacked a Lufthansa 747
jumbo jet with 188 persons
aboard to tbe war-torn Red Sea
.. state of southern Yemen today.
They set free some of the
passengers but kept the men
aboard, Including Joseph P.
Kennedy 10, and then placed

March 4-5 Is Signup

(ConUnued from page I )
assumed that the press waited
Sign-up ·days for the
until today to splash the story Pomeroy Boys League will be
of Nixon's visit "in order that March 4, Saturday from 9 a.m.
our American frienda might to 12 noon, and Sunday, March
have the opportunity to publish 5, from 1 to 3 p.m. at the
the pictures first in their Pomeroy City Hall.
papers."
There wiU also be a final
· Such treatment of a guest is sign-up for boys on March 12,
highly unusual in papers Sunday, from 1 to 3.p.m., also
which, of course, take their at the Pomeroy City Hall.
cues from the government.
Any boy seven years of age
A.nd the papers rarely print
piCtures
While . Cltou and Nixon...,
Communist revolutionary and
a capitalist lawyer.--talked at.
long, green table m the Great
Hall of the People, a glowing
.
Pat Nixon got close to the
Mrs. Clara B. Welch, 78,
people.
Dextet Route 1, died Monday
lite tasted and -nibbled her afternoon at the Holzer
way through the huge, im- Medical Center. Mrs. Welch
maculate kitchen of the ornate, was a member of the Mount
Vlctorian-&amp;yle Peking Hotel, · Union Baptist Church.
where 110 cooks and chefs were
She Is survived by four
preparlngsomeofthe best food daughters, Mrs. Robert
In Cl!lna. Then she visited the Molden, Dexter Route 1; Mrs.
summer palace used by Esther Richmond, St. Albans,
Cltlna's rulers in the 18th W. Va.; Mrs. Bernice Justis,
century.
Gallipolis, and Mrs. Anunie
PetGoes lolbeZoo
Hysell, Canton; two sons,
From there she went to the Russell of Lake City, Fla., and
zoo and giggled at the antics ol Julian, of Christian Llike, 111.;
two pandas which will he two sisters, Mrs. Esta Welch,
O!ou'sglft to the United states. Gallipolis, and Mrs. Rosie
The Nixons plan to donate two Spears, Proctorville; 23
shaggy musk oxen to the grandchildren, and 14 great·
Peking Zoo - animals long grandchildren.
110ughl by the Cl!lnese.
runeral services will be held
On her llltchen tour, Mrs. at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Mt.
Nixon laughed when she Union Baptist Church with the
reached out to shake han«!S Rev. Jay Stiles officiating.
with one of lh!l Mandarm Burial will be in Vinton
cooks, only .lb find his hand Memorial Gardens. Friends
encruated In sticky dough. He may call at the Martin Funeral
joined the general laughter.
Home In Rutland any time on
Wednesday and until noon on
Thursday.

a ara welch

and not 16 before Aug. 1, 1972,
)UUE ROSE
wi11 be able to participate.
POMEROY - Julle Rose,
There will be a small fee to
(Continued from page I)
daughter
of Mr. aud Mrs.
cover the insurance and cap.
Joho .Rose of Long Bottom, band needed changes. These
This will probably be between
·
bas completed her training changes were made and Mr.
$3 and $4. This fee must be paid
as
a cosmetologist at the Bowen was informed that the
before any boy can practice
Nationwide Beauty situation had improved.
with his team.
Academy In Columbus. Miss
"7. In March, 1971, Mr.
Anyone who is interested in
Rose
attended
the
school
Bowen asked the adsupervising a team is asked to
during
the
Rlllllllltr
between
ministration
for assurance In
call Tom Grueser, Pomeroy.
her
junior
aud
senior
year
at
the permanency of his position
Following the final March 12
Eastern
High
School
and
since
he was considering
sign-up there Will be a meeting
then
returned
to
ber
training
buying property and a· new
of all managers, parents and
,
at
the
academy
foUowlng
home
in Meigs County. He was
anyone else interested in
graduation from Eastern assured by the administration
helping.
last spring. Miss Rose bas that he had sufficient job
accepted
employment at · security to warrant buying the
·~-~;
Kathy's Kut and Kurl Sbop, home."
tpeClJ
one mtle off Route 7 on
David Robinette, speaking
County
Road
8%.
on Bowen's behalf, said he
lven
unc
· feels Bowen has done an outRACINE - Specifications
standing job with all of the
for a new fire truck for the
bands in the Meigs District
village of Racine were sub"considering hardships placed
mitted by fire department
upon him." Robinette said in
members at a recent meeting
his opinion many imof Racine Council.
The annual "send a mouse to provements have been made
Council took no action on college" phase of the annual and Bowen had done a good job
submitting the specifications Meigs County cancer Soccety at all levels.
for bids, Pete Simpson, Lt. of fund drive Is helng observed in
Arthur Miller, a former band
the fire department reported. elementary schools across booster president, also spoke in
An order must be placed for Meigs County this week.
support of Bowen. He said
a fire truck two years in ad·
Brochures and envelopes are "several" parents at a meeting
vance of delivery. Deadline being distributed to the a few years ago had indicated
school
for that they expected to "dictate"
date for dellvery of a new truck elementary
is May 1976.
collection of funds with which to the band director. MiUer
In order to maintain low 'fire to purchase mice for ex- said he told these parents at the
insurance rates for residents of perimental purposes in the lime that it was not the duty of
the district a state law requires cancer program. Mrs. Ullian the boosters to "diciate" but to
the purchase of a new truck Moore, chairman of the do everything possible to help
every 20 years.
project, reports that last year the band.
Simpson also reported that a 21 cents provided a mouse
He also commented that
fund campaign for radio whlle this year the cost is up to Bowen had worked under
equipment for the emergency 57 cents each.
"great hardships" in that he
truck will be started within the
Mrs. Moore stresses that was the first band director for
next few days. Residents who although 57 cents is needed for the new district under conare served by the emergency each mouse, contributions solidation and UU.t students
unit will be notified by letter from children in smaller had been used to having
for contributions. A goal of amounts are readily ac. separate directors in the three
$1500 has been set.
ceptable. Children are given a high schools before consmijll pin decorated with a solidation- Rutland, Pomeroy
mouse replica when they and Middleport.
.
STUDY NEW PLAN
Carl Horky questioned the ·
Representatives of the Meigs return their envelopes although
empty
to
their
reamount
of lime allowed for
Local, Southern Local and
spective
schools.
practicing by band students.
Eastern Local School District,
Bowen, entering Into the
boards of education met with
discussion, said he had been
the county board Monday night
approached
about a year ago
to review the new state school
on the question of adequate
foundation program outlined
time but that it would have
by Robert Bowen, county
been difficult to change
superintendent of schools.
schedules in the middle of the
season. He also reported that
CLUB TO MEET
giving students longer periods
The ·Past Officers Club of
A memorial service for for band during school hours
Racine Chapter OES will meet Helen Anne Hardy, 48, Char· had been discussed but was not
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the don, Ohio, was held at 11:30 considered possible.
Shrine clubhouse. Potluck a.m. today at St. John's
Board President Frank w.
refreshments will be served. Episcopal Cl!urch, 700 High St., Porter pointed out that
Worthington. Mrs. Hardy was students could not be transthe daughter of Ewing T. ported home If rehearsals of
TWO NAMES OMilTED
Boles, director of the Ohio the band were held after school
Unintentionally omitted in Valley Publishing Co.
hours . Another resident
the obituary of Mrs. Anna
Mrs. Hardy worked with the pointed out the problem in
Yeager Monday were names of Geauga ColDlty Chapter of the preparing bands for pertwo surviving step-sons, American Cancer Society formances with the students
William Yeager, of Kent, and several
years
before living many miles away, and
James, of Middleport.
discovering lltte last year that having no transportation, II•
she had the disease. lite died at rehearsals were · held after
3a.m. Saturday at the Cl!ardon school hours.
SING PLANNED
Hospital.
Porter thanked the group of
A hymn sing will be held at
~urvlvlng also are her teachers and parents' who
7:30p.m. Saturday at the old mother, Mrs. Katherine Boles, appeared at the meeUng and
Dexter Church. The public is and a brother, Dr. Ewing promised that no action would
invited.
Thomas Boles, Jr., of :1:300 be taken on the matter until the
Onandaga Drive, Columbus. regular March meeting. The
Funeral services were held board then recessed to go to the
Monday afternoon at St. Luke's office of Meigs County
Episcopal Cl!urch In Cl!ardon. Superintendent Robert Bowen
A private burial service was where state school foundation
held Tuesday at the Walnut provisions were to be
Grove Cemetery In . Worth- discussed.

Teachers

Died MondaY

MEIGS .THEATRE

WDGE TO MEET

Tonight, Feb. 22
I NEVER SANG
FOR MY FATHER
ITedlnic.olorl
Melvin Douglas
Gene HAckman
" GP"

Plus

SUMMER TREE
ITechnicolorl
Jack Warden
Michael Douglas
" GP"
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
February 23-24
NOT OPEN

CHESTER - A special
meeting of Shade River Lodge
453 will be beltl at 7:30 Thurs.
day e\.enlrig at the hall In
O!ester. Work will be In the
master masons degree. All
master masorui are Invited.
Denver. Well is worshipful
master.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
DISCHARGED - Robert
Turner, Clara RusseU, George
Warner, Margaret Bissell,
Edna Roush, Iris Morris, Dana
Haning.
1

Citizens Bank
SERVICES

*
*
*
*
*
*
* Will Blow

Olecking Accounts

Savings Accounts
Money Orders

Night Banking

Safety Boxes
Auto Loans

Mortgage Loans

Your Mind

S
G.

•
,cations
Co iJ

FtDld Drive in
Meigs Schools

Seroice Held
For Daughter

Of Director

2-HOUR
CLEANING

(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd

explosives aboard ''to guard
against any eventuality."
Kennedy, the !~year-old son
of the !all! sj!n. Robert F.
Kennedy, boarded tbe plane at
New Delhi after a brief visit to
India as a tourist. He had
accompanied his uncle, Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, on a tour .
of Bangladesh. The senator
returned earlier.
· Egypt's semiofficial MickDe
East News Agency (MENA)
said In a dispatch from ADEN
~at there were five hijackers,
mcludlng a qualllled pUot It
identified as Yousaef Khateeb,
who seized the plane on a l'ligbt
from New Delhi to Athens.
It said ·the hijackers told
officials they had landed In
Yemen to refuel and that they
permitted 52 persons t6 disem-

Oean Up
(Continued from page 1)
project engineer for the
proposed water system meet
with Syracuse council in
regard to the new water
system. Pomeroy village has
driUed a test weU in Syracuse,
and plans are to run the water
line from Syracuse to
Pomeroy, bypassing the
present water plant.
Baronick noted that carter
and Evans, who are working at
the site of the new Jones Boys
location on West Main St.,
asked lor a six inch water tap
Instead of a four Inch as they
plan to install a sprinkler
system. The town will run the
llne to the edge of their
property line for $400 which is
the cost of a four inch water
tap.
A letter was read by Clerk
Jane Walton asking council to
consider repairing Point Lane.
Council agreed to review
needed repairs of all streets in
the village.
Mees reported it has been
suggested that mercury vapor
hghts be placed on the parking
lots. It was noted that approximately nine lights would
be needed. No action was
taken.
In regard to upgrading
village ordinances, Baronick
suggested rather thlm pay a
firm $3,600 for the . work that
possibly coUege students could
do II. No action was taken.
Aletter was read from Major
Gay H. Duke, mayor of Ripley,
W.Va., In regard to upgrading
SR 33. Duke suggested a
meeting be set to discuss the
progress of the road. No action
was taken.
Attending were Baronick,
Mees, Lucine Poulin, Ralph
Werry, Don CoUlns, William
Snouffer, and Elma Russell
council members; Clerk Jan~
Walton, Treasurer Phyllis
Hennesy and Chief Webster.

bark-38 women, 15 children
andoneman. It did not identify
the man but said the hijackers .
warned Yemeni . authorities
from comtnc too .clOBe.
MENA said tbe pemngers
were stlll aboard the plane at 9
a.m. EST.
Motives of the hijackers
remained obacure but broad· ·
casts Indicated they were
Palestinian guerrillas ''lf).th a
grudge agalnst llrael and West
Germany, which baa close ties
with Israel and has supplied It
with ald.

!here's a Full Service
Bank thai can meel all
your money needs. Do
you need a loan, a

checking or savings
account, a safe storage

spot? We're II!

WHEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

_(Continued from page 1)
the U. S. command amounced.
On the ground, the &amp;uth VIetnamese reported kiJilng 62
guerrillas in the heaviest single battle this year, whUe suffering
only two wounded of their Oli'n.
In addition, they reported killing 60 more guerrillas In two
other battles In Quang Nam Province 300 miles north of Saigon at
a cost ol 10 of their own wounded and six missing. All three
battles were fought In South Vietnain's Mllltary Region I,
comprJsing the five northernmost jrovlnces. The surge of
Communist attacks that ll\llrked President Nixon's Peking visit
tapered off from more than 50 Monday to 22 today.
PEKING - IN AN UNPRECEDENTED display, the fourpage Peoples' Dally )ll!blished seven photographs of President
Nilon today. The people of Peking queued up to get their copy.
Two of the photos showed Nixon beaming and shaking hands with
Cl!lna's Communist party patriarch, Chalnnan Mao Tse-tung.
Another picture depicts Mao's study, With the chalnnan
sitting back In an armchair near a table piled With books. Nixon
i.s leaning forward and Henry A. Kilsinger; Nixon's national
aecurity affairs adviser, l.s sitting beside the President and
listening raptly, his banda folded. The other pictures show Nixon
with Premier Chou En-lal- the welcome at the airport; a scene
of Nixon reviewing the troope; his lira! meeting With Chou at the
Great HaU of the People; and at the formal banquet Monday
night.

8.UDGET
·SHOP I·

DANCE
Friday &amp; Saturday Night

Whispering Pines

Stretch Panty Hose
One Size Fits All

'tAl DDLEP9RT, OH 10.
Member Fede~~L~!IIIMrr~
'

r- '

"

'

I

•

pair

First Floor Hosle,y Department

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

ANNOUNCE THAT

TER
PORTRAIT STUDIOS, 'Inc.
Studio Hours
At
Our
.
.
. To lntrodlaee

Master Portraits
Color Artistry
We Offer a

GIANT WAU
SIZE .

Nite Cub
10 til 2

By

Music
The RNI McCoys
4p~ . .Band &amp; Female Singer
,from Beverly, Olllo

11x14

5
thru
Saturday, February 26th
11 AM-4 PM and 5 PM-8 PM

_

llriM '• .,....

......

11:

· I'OITaA•r

1~00

Phis 50c Film

DAILY
. Thll .. "" ,; ...... , ....... lai.nil
,..,,,,...., 1ft

. .·

LIYI!I(I C~OII

. VAlUE'·

Wednesday, February 23rd·

••

cartrett, off duty at the tlme, Manager Dick Caldwell ·and
said he never before had shot Cartrett, a student pilot, ,
said he tried to commit suicide at a man In his 10 years on the returned from a flight.
"He motioned lor us to come
because his Wife was l~aving Gast011 County rural police
·out with our han~ up," Car·
blm, crashed two small planes ·.force.
without Injury Tuesday' and
Wensel was charged with trett said. "As I moved oUt; I
wai captured by a pollceman · armed robbery. Other charges took my pistol from my holster
who wu shooting to kiU blm were expected to be filed later, and put it In my back pocket so
and mlased.
and the FBI was notified to he couldn 'I see the bulge."
~ ·He begged me to go ahead Investigate possible air piracy.
Wensel had trouble starting
and kill blm. He Sfld he wished
Dldn't'Want to Live
the plane so he ordered
my aim had been a little bet,
Wensel. told police he didn't caldwell to td1 him what to do,
ter,": s81d Detective L. W. want to live because his wife all the wbUe keeping the rifle
Cartrett, who,' aiming at said she was going to divorce leveled on him.
Wensel's head, had missed his him, Detective Capt. Jim
"He said, 'I'm going to take
first shot and knocked a .22 A)lten said.
my first flying' lesson today,'"
caliber rlfie from Wensel's
Wensel arrived at the airport cartrett said.
h8nds with hls second shot. · a short ·time after airport
Cartrett said Wensel ogt the

Ch

. . Gi'ge
··
.............. The .......
Thtlt cww..n IIi; ••

-............

•

•

~4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , _ . . . . . . . . . . lloolt. .

... , JIM ....... :$1."1'1r'llt

• ......,

Chou, in Mellow Mood, Hints U.S.
Newsmen May He Allowed to Stay

plane off the ground on a
bounce and traveled about 300
yards at 25 feet altitude before
he crashed nose fiist in a
roadside field.

plane, which he smashed Into a
PEKING (UP!) - In
thirdaircraltaftera short taxi .
He jumped from the plane and President Nixon 's presence, a
. began chasing the hostages smiling Premier Chou En-lai
who were headed back to the dropped an intriguing but
office, firing one stray shot, ·vague hint Ieday that
American newsmen - who
Car Commandeered
cartrett said.
were
sent ·packing in 1949 .Wensel climbed out of the
"When they were clear, I may be welcome to remain in
wreckage with the rifle and
commandeered a car 1whose hollered at the man with the China after Nixon departs.
Chou dropped the ambiguousoccupants had stopped to try to rifle," Cartrett said. "H~
ly
worded invitation at the start
help. He ordered them back to turned to me, holding the gun
the airport and, with the ad' lev~!. I shot at him ~nd then I of his third work:ng session
ditional hostages, marched shot at him a second time and with Nixon, this one held in the
caJdweU and the others back bit the rifle and knocked it out President's luxurious lakeside
guest house that has been
from the office out to the of his hand."
cartrett said he aimed for dubbed "the Peking White
flightllne, Cartrett said.
House." It was snowing when
Wensel started a second the man's head.

Devoted To 'The lntereata Of Tlae Meigt·Ma&amp;On Area

NO. XXIV
NO. ' 221
er· zmn

POMEROY-M.IDD~EPOiH. ,QI:UO

, . WEDNfSDAY, FEBRUARY 231 1972_

Po~eroy
One. hundred years ago the
American neurologist George
Huntington happened to be the
first scientist to describe a
nervous disorder that makes
older persons progressively
less able to control their limbs.
The ailment became known
.S "Huntington's Disease" or
Huntington's Chorea, one of the
few iUnesses to bear a par·
ticular eponym.
Neurologist
Huntington
made his first presentation on
the disease, through what

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CEN (S

Figures in ·Centennial

circumstances are unknown, at
a meeting of the Meigs County
and
Pomeroy
Medical
Societies in 1872.
A Centennial observance
marking Huntington's first
presentation will he conducted
Sunday evening, March 26, in
Columbus at the Center for
Tomorrow . On other days
biochemistry, pathology and
treatment of this most tragic
disorder will be discussed.
The Sunday eveniitg meeting
is a part of a three day in·

ternational symposium involving approximately 75
persons from other countries
and a similar number of the U.
. S., according to George W.
Paulson,.M. D., arrangements
secretary for the host group,
the Neurological Associates,
Inc., Chatham Lane, Columbus.
Charles E. Blakeslee,
president of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
and its membership, have been
invited to attend March 26

historical session.
A historical note of local
interest to be explained ,
perhaps,
after further
research, is how and why Dr.
Huntington made his first
presen!Jltion of Chorea at a
meeting in Meigs County. Dr.
Huntington's personal rec.ords
(he died in 1916) indicate he
made the presen!Jltion at a
joint m,eeting of the Meigs
County and Pomeroy Medical
Societies in Pomeroy in the
year 1872.

~m;;m·IS:l·~~:~~~~:~:;z~:o.:!:~!&amp;:!8~:~:!:~~:!»3!&amp;:~&amp;:~:!:~i::~:~~:~~~:~~s~:;s~:~-:!&amp;

Steps Taken to! Collins Confident

1$; HAPPY.TO

,,.

GASTONIA, N.C. (UP!)-

Roger Dlil~ Wensel, 29, who

Reg. $1 25

'

I

~

Not His Day·to Die, tho1lgh He Tried

Panty Hose .Sale

3

__,.moo

ummit

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Meigs Gals too
Much for Kyger

o•r

'

.

Ington.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown
Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Pomeroy
The girls'basketball team at
Tuesday was 38 degrees under Meigs High &amp;hool continued
Phone 992·5428
partially cloudy skies.
its winning streak by defeating
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •. . Kyger Creek Monday night 44
to 17. .
Big guns for Meigs were Pat
Harris and Sherry King with 14
euch followed by Deb Ohlinger
with 11, Jane Thomas and
Chris Miller 2 each and Ava
Sayre 1.
For Kyger, T. Hall had 6, s.
Hall,
S. Nunn and Saxon 3 each
••• Jllilll
and Gardner 2.
·
'
BY QUARTERS
Meigs
8 14 T/ 44
from
Ky.Cr.
2 8 16 17

BAKER

tcooUDued fl'tUI Pflie 1)
Ge&lt;rge and Marcy · Owens,
saxophone. quartet.
~ Becky Wright, Jo EDen
· Diehl, lnglid Hawley, Melanie
Ha.ckett and Debbte Gamet,
woodwind quintet; Donna
Francis, Lynne Baker,
Elirabelll Blaetlnar, Sharon
·WilsOn, and Barbara Archer,
woodwind quintet; Connie
Grueser, Connie Radford, and
Debbie Triplett, trumpellrio;
Jim McC!pre, PhiUp Ohllnger,
Gary Gureser and, Marty
Seelig, trombon~ quartet;
Connie . Grueser, Connie
Radford, Melanie Hackett,
Melanie Burt, Fred Jones and
Nathan Robinette, brass
sextet; Connie Grueser,
trumpet solo.

News .•• in Briefs

PRlCES ARE RIG8T!

If ' s great to know

10 Combos

·,,

esA1ISIACTIOH IS Of (OUISI OIIAUNrtiD .

Or~1ze-~t ,

ACTIVE IN CRUSADE -Mrs: Robert Kuhn, Pomeroy,
1nd the Rev. Charles Simons, pastor of the Middleport First
Baptist Church, will take active roles In the annual Mid·
dleport Community Crusade whicbaeta under:way Sunday.at
. &lt;· )lie MiddlePort Eleftlentary School. Services will be held
from SUnday through SUnday, March 7with the Heath United
Methodist, Cl!urch of the Nazarene, First . United
Preabyterlan, First Baptist and the MI. Moriah Baptist
Cl!urches joining for the annual services. Mrs. Kuhn will
serve as accompanist and choir director with aU singers to
report to the school at 6:30 each evening prior to tile service.
The Rev. Mr. Simona will serve as song leader.

Jean Will of Pomeroy is
chairman Of a steering group
that acted Tuesday night
formally to organize a Meigs ·
County Chapter of the Hwnane
Society of the United States.
Meeting at the Meigs Inn
with John Inman, Fort Wayne,
Ind., regional HSUS director,
Mrs. Will named other standing commiteees and assisted
Inman in a general discussion
of short and long range goals of
the proposed chapter.
f'ormorethanayearasmall
group of local persons conBY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
cerned about the treatment of
WASHINGTON- AMERICANS' C~ of living rose 0.3 pet. animals - and children In January, with such things as meats and new cars costing have been meeting informally.
more, the Lal&gt;or DePartment reported today.
Last night was the first formal
The department said consumers also paid more last month action to organize.
than In December (or some services, whlle prices dropped for
Inman showed a fihn, "The
fresh vegetables, clothing, used cars and gasoUne. The January Animals are Crying," which
increaae In the Conaumer Price Index, covering a wide range of documented the national
costs of products and services like medical treatment, compared problem HSUS attempts to
with a 0.4pct. rise In December-steepestrisein six months.
meet.
Another meeting is expected
WNDON-'TELEPHONED THREATS touched off a series in two weeks when further
of bomb scares today In London and In Aldershot where an Irish planning will be made for a
Republican Army (IRA) bomb killed seven persons Tuesday more public meeting in a large
including a Roman Catholic army chaplain, Father Gerard place .
Among close, reachable
Weston, who had been sent home from Belfast for his ,own safety.
One bomb scare came at the House of Commons where a goals the new chap~uld be
member noticed a briefcase leaning against the base of a statue interested In are:of the late Uoyd George. An army bomb disposal squad found it • - Sponsorship of "Kindness
was the property of MP Antony Buck and contained only notes Clubs" in .the county's
elementary schools.
for a speech and recorda of Commons Jiroceedlngs.
- Informational programs
Anotber call from a man who said he was a member of the
through
fihns and talks in the
IRA said a bomb would explode In a car parked near ·Charing
Cross. The station was sealed off but that cali also turned out to
be a hoax. Acaller In Aldershot said a bomb had been placed in a
gold colored Olrysler sedan. PoUce sealed off a large area of
central Aldershot, 38 miles southwest of London and pollee
cleared a 400-yard siretch of road near Town HsU. No bomb was
found.

.ews .. in·. Briefi

schools and at public
gatherings.
- Sponsor a survey of the
animal kingdom in Meigs
County, numbers, kinds, etc.
Jeremy McCreary ,
'Gallipolis, interested in a
Gallia County chapter being
formed, joined the talks. ,
Committees named were ,
Fund raising, Dorotha Fisher,
Willie Maude Coates, Betty
Bar on I c k;
program
development, Carol Ohlinger,
Rita Lewis, Dorotha Fisher;
treasurer, Carolyn Smith;
legal consultant, Nonga
Roberts; publicity, Lucy
Amsbary, Myla Woods and
Barbara Belzing, and by-laws,
Chet Tannehill.

4 Divorce
Suits Filed

Four suits for djvorce filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court are by Dorothy M.
Greathouse, Racine, vs. Harry
B. Greathouse, Racine;
Katherine Pauley, Rutland vs.
Kennety Pauley, Rutland;
Roger Deem, Middleport, vs.
Vicki Deem, Pomeroy, and
June M. Murphy, Pomeroy, Rt.
4, vs. Robert A. Murphy,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4, each charging
gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Divorce actions dismissed
were by PhylUs Blake vs .
O'Dell Blake and Alma Jane
Pullins vs. Joseph William
Pullins.
ATl'ENTION IN THE PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES
In the case of the Twentieth
shifted to four new states today, although most candidates
Mary E. Rager, 30, Mid· Street Bank, Huntington
maintained their pressure on New Hsmpahire and Florida where dleport, suffered minor against Karr Construction
the first ballots will be cast. President Nixon submitted his lacerations in a two car . Company, the court ruled that
declaration of candidacy for re-election and posted a $500 filing collision at 6:55 p.m. Tuesday the plaintiff, Twentieth Street
fee lor Inclusion on the June 8primary ballot In New Mexlco ..Sen. on Rt. 775, one and four tenths Bank, failed to meet the burden
Henry M. Jackson, D-WaSb., was the first Democrat entered in miles south of Rt. 141.
of proof required by law,
the primary.
According to .the Gallia- therefore the court ruled In
Gov. Wllllam G. MUUken signed a law Tuesday to add Meigs Post State Highway favor of the Karr Construction
Michigan to the list of states with primary elections, end Patrol, she was a passenger. In Company.
Alabama Gov. George C; WaUace Indicated he would probably a car driven by Mostala Rafii,
run In the May 16 primary. A PemsylYI!nla "popularity poll" 37, Gallipolis. .
The. patrol said Rsfil was
Veterans Memorial Hospital
tapped Jackson as most Ukely to win the state's April 25
attempting
to
turn
his
car
when
DISCHARGED - Golda
Democratlc-•primaty. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey ran second
followed by Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, WaUace and Sen. Edmund it stalled i~ the highway, where Wyant, General Hall, Vivian
it was struck by a car driven by Johnson, Norman Smith,
Muskle,
Rose Z. Jeffers, 59, Patriot. Juanita · Frederick, Patricia
COLUMBUS -STATE SEN. OAKLEY C. Collins, R·lronton, . There was moderate damage Powell, Mary Jo Dobbins,
said Tuesday there is 1\o reason lot him to back off irom par· to poth cars. Rafii was cited for Mayme Cus!er, Minnie Wise.
tlclpatlng In Senate action on strip mine control legislation even making an Improper turn.
TAKING RESERVATIONS
A deer was killed In an acthough he 1.1 a strip mine company owner. "There's not a man In
The
Pomeroy auto license
cident on· Rt. 7, three and one
the Jeclllatln who doesn't have a conDict of Interest at times,"
tenths miles north of Rt,3S. The bureau is now reserving
Col1lna Nld. "How about teachers and Insurance men, for. In· animal ran into the path of a license plates f"r 1972. March
stance?''
car operated by Gary A. . 15 is the final day for reserving
CoiUns was accused of confilc;t of Interest durin~! a hearinl! of Borden, 25, Lima. There was plates. Those tnlerested may
(Continued on page 18)
contact Paul Simon.
minor damage to his car.

Chou arrived, the first 1oul meant that reporters could see
weather since Nixon came umor~places " for the five days
Monday.
remaining in Nixon's visit,
Both parties appeared in high · whether they could extend their
spirits and satisfied with the s!Jly.
progress of their dialogue. The
A few American newsmen
Americans took it as a good have been admiited on · a
omen that Nixon for a second temporary basis in the afterday received extraordinary math of the thaw which
coverage in the government- developed when a U:S. ping
controlled press.
pong learn toured china,
Four photographs of the helping open the mainland to
American leMer and his Nixon.
One of the photographs which
delegation were published in
today's edition of the "People's appeared in today's paper
Daily," along with reporting showed Nixon and Chiang
which was straight forward Ching, among others. She Is the
and
factual
without wife of pfrty Chairman Mao
propaganda or embroidery.
Tse·lung. The picture was
Bantering with newsmen as taken at the Peking Opera
he posed for pictures with Tuesday night.
Nixon, Chou dropped his vague
Chou drove to Nixon's buff.
hint.
colored lodging precisely at the
"If the press wants to see appointed hour- 2 p.m. Nixon
any more places," he ·said, met him at the door with a
"they can apply to the Ministry smile and a handshake for talks
of Information. " An official of which the President hopes will
the ministry said applications lead to an all-Asian conference
to find a political settlement to
were ' 'being considered.''
Hint Unclear
the wars of Laos, Cambodia
Chou left unclear whether he and Vietnam.
Talks Recess
After two hours, the !Jllks
recessed briefly for tea, then
reswned.
Nixon asked Chou If the snow
- the first foul weather since
his
arrival Monday- would
The annual canvass or
(Continued on page lb)
business telephone customers
in the Pomeroy . Middleport
area is under way General
Telephone Co. of Ohio an·
nuunced today.
Kenley Krinn, Athens
district commercial manager,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio,
said directory company
The Meigs County board of
representatives will call on commissioners conducted
businessmen to review and routine business , approving
confirm listings for the 1972 one animal claim at their
phone directory being com- regular meeting Tuesday.
piled.
Raymond T. Smith, Pomeroy,
This canvass lasts until Rt. 2, was paid $111.30 for the
March 10. Closing date is April loss of a calf.
7, the deadline for residential
Attending were Com·
customers to make changes in missioners Bob Clark and
the new directory.
Warden Ours and · Clerk
Listed In the book with Martha Chambers. It was
Pomeroy and. Middgeport are announced that a meeting on
Letart Falls, Portland, Racine emergency medical service
and Rutland. The 1972 direc· will he held in the courtroom of
tory is scheduled for delivery the courthouse on Wednesday,
in June .
March I at 7:30p.m.

or

Business Phone
Canvass Opens

Calf Oaim
Made Good

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Sen. "If it is not passed, we will
Oakley. C. Collins, R·lronton, have the same prehistoric
ch'airman of the Senate monster we have had for
Education Committee, said years,'' he said .
Tuesday his committee will
(
hold a special meeting next
week to vote on legislation
separating into two cabinetlevel agencies the Department
of Mental Hygiene and
Correction.
Collins said he anticipated
the measure , which already
has cleared the House, would
have little trouble gaining
approval from his committee.
Collins' remarked followed a
committee hearing on the bUt
during which the chairman of
Gov. John J. Gilligan's Task
Force on Mental Health and
Retardation testified Ohio's
outmoded combination of the
men!Jll health and corrections
agencies has kept many
competent mental health of·
ficials from coming to the s!Jlte
to work.
"Mental health may not have
been a dirty word in Ohio,''
said Victor M. Victoroff; a
psychiatrist and practicing
SPECIAL PROJECI' -Members of the Ladles Auxiliary of the Syracuse Volunteer Fire
physician . "But Ohio was a
Department
are again working each week on their annual Easter project. Members meet one
dirty word in mental health
day a week to create colorful baskets, trimmed by hand, from plastic containers. The bottles
organizations throoghout the
across the front ol the picture demonstrate the steps each basket goes through . This year the
nation. Now I think we are on
organization is taking orders for $1 baskets only - the baskets filled with candy - and orders
the verge of a breakthrough."
Victoroff said clearance of
may be placed by calling Doris Friend, 992-5841; Ada Slack, 992-2806; Elva Dailey, 992-2613;
the bill and separation of the
Agnes White, 992-2481; Janice Lawson, 992-7351, or Marie Rizer, 992-2659. Pictured at
corrections and mental health
Tuesday's work session on the left, from the left, are Mrs. Ada Slack, Mrs. Eleanor Bohram,
functions would result in imand Mrs. Jean Hall. On the right of the table is Mrs. Doris Friend, general chairman. Chocolate
proved patient care.
covered eggs in various flavors may also be ordered by calling the numbers above.

Auto Struck
In Highway

.

..

.\

I

EASTER EGGS PRODUCI'ION LINE - Women of the
Syracuse Fire Department 's Auxiliary are turning out
hundreds of chocolate covered, flavored leggs for the Easter
season. These will be sold and also placed In Eastern baskets
prepared by the auxiliary each year to sell as a money-

~-~--"''

..

making j)roject. From the left at Tu~y'!l work seu1on w1ib
tray~ of eggs are Mrs. Adrieme Hubbard, Mrs. Mlrle R!Jer,
Mrs. Clara Lavender, and Mrs. Mary Pickens and 11-month·
old, Eber: Pickens, Jr ., who attends each work seuion and
finds the project fascinating.
'
.. '

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